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Shechem

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Shechem, Sichem or Shkhem (שְׁכֶם / שְׁכָם "Shoulder", Standard Hebrew Šəḫem / Šəḫam, Tiberian Hebrew Šəḵem / Šəḵām (situated at Tell Balatah 32°12′N 35°20′E / 32.200°N 35.333°E / 32.200; 35.333, 2 km east of present-day Nablus) was the first capital of the Kingdom of Israel.

File:Shechem Baal Berith temple from south tb n011300 wr.jpg
Ancient Shechem
File:Shechem Middle Bronze wall.wr.jpg
Bronze Wall

The old city of Shechem dates back an estimated four thousand years. At Shechem, Abram "built an altar to the Lord who had appeared to him . . . and had given that land to his descendants" (Gen 12:6-7). This was the first recorded place where Abram stopped when he and Sarah and Lot and their entourage entered the land. On this occasion, God confirmed to Abram the promise He had first made to him in Ur of the Chaldees, that He would give him this land. It is possible that Abram climbed nearby Mount Ebal to view his inheritance, much of which could be seen from that peak. The Bible states that Abraham traveled through Shechem on his way to Canaan and offered his first sacrifice to God. After the conquest of Canaan, Joshua assembled the Israelites here and encouraged them to follow the Mosaic Laws. During the period of the Judges, Abimelech was crowned king. An influential commercial center, the city prospered from trade in locally produced grapes, olives, wheat, and livestock from the Middle Bronze Age into the Late Hellenic Period (ca. 1900–100 B.C.E.). Archaeological excavations have revealed that the city was destroyed and rebuilt 22 times, until its final destruction in the second century C.E. Among the city’s visible remains are a series of defensive walls and gates, a palace or governor’s house, a residential quarter, and a portion of a temple to Zeus commissioned by the Roman Emperor Hadrian in the second century C.E.

In the Amarna Letters, Shachmu (Shechem) was the center of a kingdom carved out by Labaya (or Labayu), a Canaanite warlord who recruited mercenaries from among the Habiru. The city fell to the Israelites sometime before 1000 BC. In the Book of Judges, it was the center for the ephemeral Israelite kingdom of Abimelech ben Gideon. Later, it was an administrative center under Solomon and the northern Kingdom of Israel.

In Classical times, Shechem was the main settlement of the Samaritans, whose cultic center was on Mount Gerizim, just outside of the town. In Acts 7:16 the place is called Sychem, and in the John 5:5 it is called Sychar.

Shechem is also the location of Jacob's Well, where the John 4:5–6 sets Jesus' meeting with the woman of Samaria, lay in a narrow shoulder of land in the narrow valley between Mount Gerizim and Mount Ebal, approximately 65 km north of Jerusalem. The Ancient Roman and Arab city of Nablus lies 2 km to the west of the site. Josephus, writing in about AD 90 (Jewish Antiquities 4.8.44), placed the city between Mount Gerizim and Mount Ebal, and other ancient writers knew that it was on the outskirts of "Neapolis" (Nablus), but its archaeological site was only stumbled upon in 1903 by a German party of archaeologists led by Dr. Hermann Thiersch at a site known as Tell Balatah, beside the traditional site associated with the tomb of Joseph (Joshua 24:32).

Shechem had been a Canaanite settlement, mentioned on an Egyptian stele of a noble at the court of Senusret III (c. 18801840 BC). Shechem first appears in the Tanakh in Genesis 12:6–8, which records how Abraham reached the "great tree of Moreh" at Shechem and offered sacrifice nearby. Later Joseph's bones were brought out of Egypt and reburied at Shechem.

See also


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