Excavations at Tel Eton

While there exists ample archaeological remains from the Israelite period of the divided monarchy (930-587 BC), unambiguous, definitive evidence of the united monarchy has been more difficult to come by. The period of the united monarchy encompasses the reigns of three kings, Saul, David, and Solomon, from around 1052 to 931 BC. There has been a lot of debate in the archaeological community over whether there was ever a united monarchy; perhaps, it is argued, the unified kingdom of David and Solomon is a national fable. While direct archaeological or epigraphic evidence of David and Solomon from the period of the united monarchy has yet to be discovered, recent excavations in the Judean highlands that point to the presence of a large, centralized Israelite power there are the strongest links to a Davidic kingdom. Several sites in the highlands point to the existence of a united monarchy in Judea.



One of the most interesting sites associated with the united monarchy is Tel Eton. Tel Eton is located about 30 miles outside of Jerusalem. Archaeologists have identified it as the biblical city of Eglon, as mentioned in the Old Testament, "This was the portion of the tribe of the Judites by their clans…Lachish, Bozkath, Eglon" (Joshua 15:20, 39). According to the Bible the city was originally inhabited by the Amorites but was allotted to the clan of Judah after the conquest. Tel Eton is a 15-acre site strategically situated at a juncture where an ancient north-south road connected the Beersheba Valley with the Ayalon Valley and where several east-west roads connected the coastal plain with Mount Hebron [1].



Recent digs at Tel Eton, overseen by Professor Avraham Faust of Bar Ilan University, have uncovered a sprawling town dominated by a large, walled fortress. The scope of the ruins suggests that Tel Eton was the third largest city in Judah, after Jerusalem and Lachish. The ruins date from around the year 1000, the period of the Davidic kingdom. The fortress at Tel Eton is laid out on something called the "four room style", which is characteristic of Israelite construction. It was a very well constructed structure, using ashlar masonry (the same sot used at the so-called 'Solomonic Gates' at Hazer and Megiddo). The size and complexity of the fortress suggests it was some sort of administrative center; Professor Faust has hypothesized it may have been the seat of some kind of governor.



A governor of whom? The site is not specifically linked to David, it definitely demonstrates a period of transition from a Canaanite culture to a Judean culture in the highlands of Judah. In other words, it establishes the presence of an organized, administrative state in the highlands during the Davidic period. Does this "prove" the existence and reign of David? Not exactly, but Professor Faust inks the implications are clear and leave few other options: “The association with the highland kingdom, as well as the time of the change, are the main discovery, and if someone thinks that there was no King David, that person should come with a different name for the highland king in whose time the region was incorporated into the highland kingdom” [2]



Until and unless epigraphic references to David are discovered dating from the 10th century, the strongest archaeological support for the existence of the Davidic monarchy are finds like these at Tel Eton and Khirbet Qeiyafa which demonstrate the existence of a complex, centralized government in Judea in the 11th-10th centuries BC that was Israelite in nature.



Currently, the oldest reference to King David comes from the Tel Dan Stele, dating from 870 BC and the reign of King Omri of Israel.







NOTES



[1] https://www.christiantoday.com/article/newly-discovered-building-in-jerusalem-could-prove-biblical-king-davids-existence/128897.htm[

[2] https://www.breakingisraelnews.com/106811/new-archaeological-find-confirms-sophisticated-davidic-kingdom/

https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/ancient-cultures/ancient-israel/tel-eton-excavations-reveal-possible-judahite-administrative-center/

https://www.haaretz.com/archaeology/.premium.MAGAZINE-molerat-archaeology-supports-united-monarchy-theory-says-new-study-1.6007916







