The destruction of the north in the …

Years: 717BCE - 706BCE

The destruction of the north in the latter part of the eighth century has a sobering effect on the south.

The southern kingdom of Judah, under the Davidic monarchy, will be able to last about 135 years longer than had the northern kingdom of Israel, often only as a weak vassal state.

During this age are compiled the first four books of what will come to be known as the Bible.

The Tetrateuch, the collective name for these four works, is at this time apparently a redaction primarily of two documents, the Yahwist, or Y (after the German spelling of Yahweh) and the Elohist, or E. They refer, respectively, to passages in which the Hebrew personal name for God, YHWH (commonly transcribed Yahweh), is predominantly used, and those in which the Hebrew generic term for the gods, the plural Elohim, is predominantly used.

The main theological (or theo-political) preoccupation of the Yahwist source is to establish Israel's divinely bestowed right to the land of Canaan.

The Elohist source generally avoids the presentation of God as being like a human person and treats him instead as a more remote, less directly accessible being. (It is inferred from certain internal evidence that E was produced in the northern kingdom, Israel, in the eighth century BCE and was later combined with J. Because it is not always possible or important to separate J from E, the two together are commonly referred to as JE.)

Ahaz dies in 715, and his son Hezekiah becomes the thirteenth successor of David as king of Judah at Jerusalem.

The central legal section of the Book of Deuteronomy (compiled at the end of the seventh century BCE) probably dates from the reign of Hezekiah.

According to the Bible, he introduces many reforms, purging Canaanite practices from the religion of the Judahites.

His zealous campaign against the worship of Baal contrasts sharply with the infamous idolatry of his father, who had placed Judah under Assyrian suzerainty in 735.

The Judahite prophet Isaiah, after a period of silence, addresses himself to Hezekiah’s attempt, from 715 to 711 to free himself from the status of a vassal to Assyria.

Hezekiah may take part in a rebellion by Tyre and Sidon against Sargon II, which the Assyrians apparently crush in the year 710.

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