Migration and Trade in the Kingdom of Israel
Israel is first noted for its success and trade in the first two centuries of the Iron Age II (the reign of the Kings famously starting with Solomon) when its population expanded and disseminated with Samaria as its capital. It was during these years, too, that the country, although divided into rwo kingdoms, generally banded together in caring for its civic needs and were interdependent on each other in defending themselves from outsiders.
Some of the nations that the Israelites traded with included the Phoenicians, Assyrians, and Egyptians and yet, despite their migration and encounter with other nations, the Israelites became more interdependent one on the other leaning together rather than falling apart.
Their interdependence was all the more closely seen during the conspicuous time of King Solomon when the country received a reputation for its habit of cohesion and pattern of close family and community togetherness, and when the harmony of the nation -- and its interdependence -- was demonstrated in their need to build a Temple. The Temple was the core of the nation, the unifying force, which symbolized the nation as a whole, and to which all efforts of the nation were directed in building.
The interdependence of the nation can too be seen in the hierarchy of its various classes: 1. The layperson; 2. The Levite 3. The priest (and the High priest) 4, and the king / monarch. Each had his specific role and status as well as mission, but existence of each was needed to complete the Jewish nation.
The separate kingdoms of Israel and Judah were located on main international...
This was true for example in the northern countries of Europe where Protestantism had firmly embedded itself an thrown off Church teaching. Wars were the result as the Holy Roman Empire attempted to put down the Protestant Rebellions -- but the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 finally and politically gave the Protestant countries in the north of Europe the right to exercise their new religions. Humanism, indeed, was spreading
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