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Just Think,"
A zillion billion years after ETERNITY has begun with JESUS we will
still have FOREVER ahead of us to look forward to"
And when halfway through FOREVERS ETERNITY, we will still not know the height, length, depth, breadth or extents of our Lords Love, Kindness, Mercy, Joy, and the quadrillion new and wonderous things that He will do... He is simply God, Almighty !!!!!
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The Battles of Armageddon Megiddo and the Jezreel Valley from the Bronze Age to the Nuclear
By Eric H. Cline Assistant Professor of
Archaeology and Ancient History Department of Classical and
Semitic Languages and Literatures The George Washington
University
The Apocalypse. Judgment Day. The End of Times. Armageddon. Students
of the Bible know it as the place where the cataclysmic battle
between the forces of good and the forces of evil will unfold. Many
believe that this battle will take place in the very near future,
but few know that Armageddon is a real place—one that has seen more
fighting and bloodshed than any other spot on
earth.
Armageddon is a corruption of
the Hebrew Har Megiddo and means literally “the mount of Megiddo.”
During the past 4000 years, at least 34 bloody conflicts have
already been fought at the ancient site of Megiddo and adjacent
areas of the Jezreel Valley. Egyptians, Canaanites, Israelites,
Midianites, Amalekites, Philistines, Hasmonaeans, Greeks, Romans,
Muslims, Crusaders, Mamlukes, Mongols, French, Ottomans, British,
Australians, Germans, Arabs and Israelis have all fought and died
here. The names of the warring generals and leaders reverberate
throughout history: Thutmose III, Deborah and Barak, Sisera, Gideon,
Saul and Jonathan, Shishak, Jehu, Joram, Jezebel, Josiah, Antiochus,
Ptolemy, Vespasian, Saladin, Napoleon, and Allenby, to name but a
few of the most famous.
Throughout
history Megiddo and the Jezreel Valley have been Ground Zero for
battles that determined the very course of civilization. It is no
wonder that the author of Revelation believed Armageddon, the
penultimate battle between good and evil, would also take place in
this region!
My book, The
Battles of Armageddon: Megiddo and the Jezreel Valley from the
Bronze Age to the Nuclear Age (Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press, 2000), introduces the reader to a rich cast of
ancient and modern warriors. While doing so it ties together, for
the very first time, the wide range of conflicts that have taken
place at Megiddo and in the Jezreel Valley from the Bronze Age to
the Nuclear Age, in the place called
Armageddon.
Megiddo, a fascinating
site of twenty cities built directly on top of one another and
inhabited continuously from 3000 to 300 BC, lies at a strategic
junction of roads running north-south and east-west. Whoever had
control of Megiddo had control of one of the major trade routes of
antiquity, the Via Maris (the “Way of the Sea”) Wending its way
directly through Israel, right past Megiddo in the Jezreel Valley,
this strategically placed road ran between Egypt in the south and
Mesopotamia (modern Iran/Iraq) or Anatolia (modern Turkey) in the
north. Virtually every invading army that came through this region
during the past 4000 years fought battles for control of Megiddo and
the Jezreel Valley. The only exception was the army of Alexander the
Great, who didn’t have to fight because the area surrendered to him
first.
One lesson that can be
learned from the history surrounding the area is the importance of
maintaining a strategic presence on military and/or mercantile
routes. We also see that, while weapons and technology have changed
over the millennia, the strategies and tactics frequently have not.
Often the strategies used in the battles fought at such places are
repeated by different commanders and different armies in different
eras. Finally we learn that, probably as a result of the necessity
of occupying such strategic positions, certain areas of the world
have seen consistent fighting for literally
millennia.
In the case of Megiddo in
particular, there has been so much fighting that John, the author of
the Book of Revelation, was convinced that Megiddo would also be the
site of Armageddon, the apocalyptic battle between good and evil to
be fought sometime in the future. That is, in fact, where we get our
word Armageddon today, as I have mentioned above — it comes
originally from the Hebrew Har Megiddo, meaning “Mount or Mountain
of Megiddo.” There were so many battles in this little valley, which
measures only 20 miles long by seven miles wide, that one might
paraphrase Sir Winston Churchill and say “never in the field of
human conflict have so many fought so often over so little
space!”
My book is a detailed history of
the 34 battles that we know have been fought at Megiddo or in the
surrounding Jezreel Valley over the past 4000 years — from 2350 BC
right up until the 1973 war. I’ve tried to reconstruct each battle
to the best of our knowledge and to put it into the larger context
of the period during which it was fought, from the early campaigns
by the Egyptian pharaohs to the battles fought by the invading
Israelites against the Canaanites and Philistines; from the
conquering armies of the Greeks and Romans to the armies of the
Islamic and Crusader forces; and from the battles of Napoleon to
those of the modern Arab-Israeli
conflicts.
Whenever and wherever
there are parallels between the battles, I call attention to those
facts. An example is the 1918 case where Allenby appears to have
deliberately repeated the same tactics used by Pharaoh Thutmose III
more than 3400 years earlier. In an effort to help interpret why
some battle strategies failed while others succeeded in this small
valley, I also try wherever and whenever possible, to utilize some
of the pithy observations of the 5th century BC Chinese military
tactician Sun-Tzu and the 19th century AD Prussian military genius
Clausewitz.
From the beginning, I
envisioned this as a book aimed at a general audience and tried to
write it so that it could be read and understood by anybody with an
interest in either military history or the history of Israel and
Palestine. It was my intent to also appeal to those who weren't
already knowledgeable about those topics as well as to people whose
interests were targeted to a specific period or person, like the
Crusades or Napoleon. On the other hand, I also wanted the book to
be useful to scholars and teachers in military academies or biblical
studies programs. Therefore, the book is written in such a way that
it makes a good case study to teach in a class or seminar on
military strategy or biblical history. While I tried to make it read
and flow smoothly, almost like a novel or a detective story in
places, there are many footnotes discreetly tucked away at the back
of the book for scholars and others who wish to further investigate
a topic on their own.
Researching
and writing as I was from 1994 until 1999, I was quite aware that,
since the new millennium was rapidly approaching, the potential
existed for a great deal of public interest in at least the final
chapter of the book. This final chapter is a serious, lucid
discussion from a military point of view of the Battle of Armageddon
as described by John in the Book of Revelation. Unfortunately, it
took so long to research, write, and publish the book that it wasn’t
published until late November 2000 and I almost missed the coming of
the new millennium!
I see my book as a
pioneering effort, most notably in its use of the idea of looking at
the military history of one specific area diachronically, that is,
through years and years of history. While some books have studied
specific areas over the course of millennia, such as the city of
Jerusalem for example, and other books have studied the general
military history of a country or region, I do not know of another
book that looks at the military history of such a small area for
such a long period of time. Yet, in hindsight I realize that it is
such an obvious type of study that I suspect we will quickly begin
to see similar studies written about the military history of other
sites and specific areas of the world. This kind of a study will be
of obvious use to military historians, and the fact that the
particular area that I was studying, i.e. Megiddo and the Jezreel
Valley, is in the Holy Land, means that my study will be of use also
to Biblical scholars, as well as to interested laypeople,
particularly those fascinated by the concept of
Armageddon.
Eric H. Cline is a distinguished Assistant
Professor of Archaeology and Ancient History with the Department of
Classical and Semitic Languages and Literatures at George Washington University
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