Title: King Solomon's Navy Post by: Rhys on March 01, 2006, 09:20:31 PM I always wondered about King Solomon's navy. The Bible says that he and
Hiram had a navy that brought gold, silver, ivory, apes, and peacocks. (1 Kings 10:22 and 2 Chronicles 8: 17,18.) Hiram supplied the ships and sailors to Ezion-geber and Elath. The ships returned once every three years with their cargo. This raises some questions: 1. Ezion-geber and Elath are on the Red Sea, in a desert region. There is no lumber for building ships there. How did Hiram get the ships there? They could have hauled the lumber there from Lebanon and built a shipyard and ships. They could have built the ships at Tyre and sailed around Africa, but there is no evidence of the Phoenicians doing this at this early date. The Egyptians had a canal of sorts, but it operated erratically and was likely too shallow for ocean going ships. In a book called "The Ancient Engineers" by L. Sprague De Camp, I think I see how it was done. (De Camp was not a Christian and bashed the Scriptures every chance he got, but his history of technology is interesting and adds some light to how things were done in Bible times). In about 690 BC, the Assyrian king Sennacherib (see 2 Chronicles 32) put down a Babylonian rebellion. The Babylonians fled into the Chaldean marshes in southern Iraq, out of reach of Sennacherib's troops. He ordered up some ships from the Phoenicians, which were built in sections, probably at Tyre, and hauled overland to the Euphrates, where they were assembled and launched. This was about 300 years after Solomon's time, but I would guess the same method was used to get ships to Ezion-geber. Hiram probably had them built in sections at Tyre and then they were hauled to their destination. It would have been a shorter haul than to the Euphrates. 2. Where did the ships sail to? Most commentators seem to think Ophir had to be India and this is quite possible, considering the cargo they returned with. They could also have sailed down the African coast. It is doubtful that Solomon "discovered" India, so there must have been seagoing trade already going on, possible from Egypt or Yemen. 3. What was the outgoing cargo? Considering the value of the returning cargo, it is a puzzle what Israel had to trade that India didn't already have and that was of sufficient value to return the kind of profit Solomon and Hiram were obviously making. As an aside, it is also interesting that what is today Iraq was always three distinct areas, even in Bible times - the Assyrians in the north, the Babylonians in the center, and the Chaldeans in the south. Today there are the Kurds in the north, the Sunnis in the center, and the Shiites in the south. In both cases, it was never a single "country" except when a ruthless king or dictator united it by force, and there were constant rebellions which eventually split it up again. Not a good sign for our policy of creating a "democratic Iraq"!!! |