• Asignatura: Castellano
  • Autor: buezasss
  • hace 8 años

The death of Jericho summary

Respuestas

Respuesta dada por: Anónimo
1

Respuesta:

The account of the fall of Jericho is undoubtedly one of the best known in the Bible and therefore I will review it very briefly: In the first Biblical reference of Jericho (Jos. 2) reference is made to the fact that the Hebrew leader Joshua sent two spies into the city from their camp in Shittim (currently in Jordan). Successively besieged by the Israelites, Jericho surrendered after their murals were miraculously torn down by seven priests playing trumpets (Jos. 6). The inhabitants were killed and, according to the story, Joshua cursed and destroyed the city. (In any case, read the Book of Joshua chapter chapters 3 to 6).

Reading some articles from the network, I see that many make the big mistake of saying that "for the years in which Joshua and the Israelites are supposed to have arrived in the Promised Land (13th century BC.), The city of Jericho does not exist yet. ". Well, no, it is not exactly like that, the city of Jericho is one of the oldest walled cities in the world, whose origin dates back to 8,000 BC. of C. as it could be verified after successive excavations carried out in the last century in the ruins of Tell es-Sultán (16 km northwest of the current mouth of the Jordan in the Dead Sea, and very close to the modern city of Jericho ) Archeology has shown that successive cities throughout the millennia were built and destroyed on that site:

- A city of the Neolithic era, surrounded by a wall and inhabited from the eighth to the fourth millennium a. C. in which it was abandoned;

- A pre-Canaanite city of the early or ancient bronze age, with formidable walled defensive systems (3200-2300 BC);

- A Canaanite city of the middle bronze (around 1900–1600 / 1550 BC, the so-called patriarchal period) that probably ended up being destroyed by the pharaohs of the 18th dynasty.

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