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08-11-2013, 04:08 PM | #41 | |
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I once watched The Last Bastion, an Australian WW2 Pacific war theater TV mini-series (Robert Vaughn played Douglas MacArthur). According to this mini-series, the Aussies single handedly won the war against Japan and that MacArthur was nothing more than a cartoonish blowhard! (gee, I wouldn't call him "cartoonish" ... although political cartoonists of his day felt his blow hardy-ness was ripe for satire).
But to your point, I was a bit surprised to learn in college that the majority of the French, German and Eastern European anti-German partisans were - gasp - COMMUNISTS!!!!! Of course, we all know they were progressive thinking capitalists ... DCH Quote:
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08-20-2013, 07:11 AM | #42 | |||
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2700 Year Old Inscription in City of David Excavations
Maybe somebody will start a new thread on this but the nature of the bowl is very similar to the older inscription. The letters are about the same amount of the way down from the lip. Anyway, just wondering if the shard in the OP is misdated. The writing looks a little older in the OP picture. Quote:
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Although the link notes Quote:
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08-20-2013, 12:10 PM | #43 | |||
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It is exactly what one would expect to find. Much is known from this period, and some of the historical cores are known. Nothing though helps building a case for united monarchy I find mythical. |
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08-23-2013, 11:07 AM | #44 | |
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08-23-2013, 11:27 AM | #45 | ||
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Seems like a lot of work to compose such a great book for such a trivial reason. But it does support the Josiah idea a little - I'd seen this before of course but didn't realize the implications. |
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08-23-2013, 11:55 AM | #46 |
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08-23-2013, 03:10 PM | #47 |
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I'm not sure why you put that in such small print, Spin. It needs to be in BOLD!
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08-23-2013, 03:27 PM | #48 | |||
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08-23-2013, 07:19 PM | #49 | |||
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josiah#Sources says Quote:
This precise dating, involvement in a specific war, and consonance with the shift of coin images from astral to iconoclastic, all stand as evidence that King Josiah actually existed, despite the absence of archaeological evidence. To my reading this makes Josiah a much more likely actual historical person than Jesus Christ, since I can't see a motive to invent Josiah. By contrast, Jesus stands as disproved under Voltaire's God Principle, that if he did not exist he would have had to be invented. A fascinating thing in all this Jewish propaganda, including the Glorious Reign of His High Beatific Serenitude King David, is the effort of the Bible authors to construct a plausible story of divine legitimacy for Israel, as a mythic basis for national security. They had strong motive for this fictional construction, since Israel could not possibly survive just by the sword, and had to desperately attempt to survive by the word. This casting of the old empires as evil involved creation of a new exclusive transcendental monotheism in which the naturalistic religions of the great kingdoms of Babylon and Egypt could be critiqued as morally corrupt, perhaps because they were seen as insufficiently patriarchal, and in which the defence of Israel rested in its moral probity. Israel got squished like a bug between Babylon and Egypt, but its alienated imaginative moral fantasy of God lives on and remains the crazy creative core of Western religion. |
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08-23-2013, 07:52 PM | #50 |
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I once had the opportunity to discuss this point with Niels Peter Lemche. In effect my point was that a) every polity had a king back then, b) Judah must have had one also, c) isn't it better to call him Josiah than "What's-his-name?"
Lemche cut my legs off at the knees. His point was that if you start to do that then you end up assuming all the other biblical baggage that goes along with it. Where and why would you draw the line? We see today that minor states caught between major powers always have factions within them favoring one side or the other. It is not beyond the realm of possibility that the Egyptian-Assyrian side favored one contender - and removed the other - just as the Babylonians subsequently dethroned that dynasty when they took over. That's politics and I don't think it has changed all that much in the last 3,000 years. But we don't need King Josiah. All it would take to establish him is a single inscription and we don't have one. |
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