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Documentary Films: How the
Persian Empire Was
Built
I have shown in this series of articles that there are several pieces of evidence that the Persian Empire did not last the
200 years proposed by historians but only 21 years as described in the
Old Testament. This is an idea I presented in detail in my book,
The Fourth Day: Why the
Bible is Historically
Accurate. My article, "Old Testament
History Revised-Jeremiah's
Eclipse" provides astronomical evidence from the Bible for this idea and my article, "Old Testament History Revised-The 390
Days of
Ezekiel" provides evidence from a famous prophecy from the biblical book of Ezekiel for this idea. This article provides archaeological support for a "short" Persian Empire based on information described in
Peter James' book,
Centuries of
Darkness.
Archaeological Findings of the Babylonian and
Persian Empires
Recall that earlier in this book I proposed that the
Babylonian Empire's reign over Judah occurred about
180 years later than the Conventional
Biblical Chronology dating. The Conventional Biblical Chronology dates the
Babylonian captivity of Judah as 585
B.C. while the
Fourth Day Biblical Chronology places it in 401 B.C. If the Fourth Day
Chronology is accurate shouldn't it be reflected in the archaeology? What about Judah's migration from
Persia in accordance of the edict by
Cyrus II to rebuild the
Temple in Jerusalem? According to the Conventional Biblical Chronology this would have occurred in 539 B.C. however the Fourth Day Biblical Chronology dates this event in 350 B.C.
Let's allow Peter James' book settle the matter. According to the
Biblical record during the reign of
King Cyrus the Persian it was a very active time in
Israel. Those that acquired wealth in the Babylonian and Persian reigns of
Babylon returned home. The land was resettled, the
Temple rebuilt and walls of
Jerusalem were rebuilt.
Despite all this activity Peter James records that there were few findings for the 539-332 BC timeframe in the region. (Centuries of Darkness, page 170)
If the Fourth Day Biblical Chronology is the correct model this lack of archaeological findings is easily explained. Persia was only present from 352 B.C. to 331 B.C. so there should only be about either 21 years of artifacts present. If you believe the Conventional Chronology there would have been 207 years (539-332 B.C.) to indicate the presence of the Persians.
The Persians were just not there for much of the period in question. Peter James states that information is lacking
on many levels. A Persian strata is difficult to see and few architectural remains are present. Those strata that are present are of the timeframe after 450 BC (there is almost no evidence of finds prior to this period). According to Peter James other archaeologists have lamented the fact that to be such a relative recent timeframe in history there is surprisingly few finds for this period. (page 170, Centuries of Darkness). All these observations just enforce the observation that the Persian Empire was a short-lived event in the history of Judah. Peter James doesn't have much better news about the
Jewish Exile to Babylon.
James paints a bleak picture for archaeological findings in the timeframe 587-539 BC that represents the Babylonian
Conquest. More than one hundred years of Biblical history is barely evident in archaeological evidence. Peter James poses the question: does the time period from 587-450 BC in
Palestine represent some kind of dark period in
Israelite and Babylonian history? (Centuries of Darkness, pages 170-171). Indeed not. Since, according to Fourth Day Biblical Chronology, the Babylonians and the Persians did not show up in the lives of Judah until after 450 B.C. there is certainly no reason to believe in a '
Dark Age' in Palestine. The evidence speaks for itself, the Babylonians and the Persians were just not there from 587 B.C. to 450 B.C. They were not there because the Persian Empire only lasted twenty one years, not the more than 200 years that the conventional chronology model claims.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persian_Empire
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achaemenid_Empire
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Iran
http://www.ushistory.org/civ/4e
.asp
http://www.ancient.eu/Persia/
https://www.princeton.edu/~achaney/tmve/wiki100k/docs/Persian_Empire
.html
http://www.eduplace.com/kids/socsci/ca/books/bkf3/writing/02_empires
.pdf
- published: 04 Dec 2014
- views: 15579