A.B.D
Arabic Bible Dictionary
CAPTIVITY
CAPTIVITY (1.) Of Israel. The kingdom of the ten tribes was
successively invaded by several Assyrian kings. Pul (q.v.) imposed a
tribute on Menahem of a thousand talents of silver (2 Kings 15=>19, 20; 1
Chronicles 5=>26) (B.C. 762), and Tiglath-pileser, in the days of Pekah
(B.C. 738), carried away the trans-Jordanic tribes and the inhabitants of
Galilee into Assyria (2 Kings 15=>29; Isaiah 9=>1). Subsequently Shalmaneser
invaded Israel and laid siege to Samaria, the capital of the kingdom. During
the siege he died, and was succeeded by Sargon, who took the city, and
transported the great mass of the people into Assyria (B.C. 721), placing
them in Halah and in Habor, and in the cities of the Medes (2 Kings 17=>3,
5). Samaria was never again inhabited by the Israelites. The families thus
removed were carried to distant cities, many of them not far from the
Caspian Sea, and their place was supplied by colonists from Babylon and
Cuthah, etc. (2 Kings 17=>24). Thus terminated the kingdom of the ten
tribes, after a separate duration of two hundred and fifty-five years (B.C.
975-721).
Many speculations have been indulged in with reference to these ten
tribes. But we believe that all, except the number that probably allied
themselves with Judah and shared in their restoration under Cyrus, are
finally lost.
“Like the dew on the mountain, Like the foam on the river, Like the bubble
on the fountain, They are gone, and for ever.”
(2.) Of Judah. In the third year of Jehoiachim, the eighteenth king of Judah
(B.C. 605), Nebuchadnezzar having overcome the Egyptians at
Carchemish, advanced to Jerusalem with a great army. After a brief siege
he took that city, and carried away the vessels of the sanctuary to
Babylon, and dedicated them in the Temple of Belus (2 Kings 24=>1; 2
Chronicles 36=>6, 7; Daniel 1=>1, 2). He also carried away the treasures of the
king, whom he made his vassal. At this time, from which is dated the
“seventy years” of captivity (Jeremiah 25; Daniel 9=>1, 2), Daniel and his
companions were carried to Babylon, there to be brought up at the court
and trained in all the learning of the Chaldeans. After this, in the fifth year
of Jehoiakim, a great national fast was appointed (Jeremiah 36=>9), during
which the king, to show his defiance, cut up the leaves of the book of
Jeremiah’s prophecies as they were read to him in his winter palace, and
threw them into the fire. In the same spirit he rebelled against
Nebuchadnezzar (2 Kings 24=>1), who again a second time (B.C. 598)
marched against Jerusalem, and put Jehoiachim to death, placing his son
Jehoiachin on the throne in his stead. But Jehoiachin’s counsellors
displeasing Nebuchadnezzar, he again a third time turned his army against
Jerusalem, and carried away to Babylon a second detachment of Jews as
captives, to the number of 10,000 (2 Kings 24=>13; Jeremiah 24=>1; 2
Chronicles 36=>10), among whom were the king, with his mother and all his
princes and officers, also Ezekiel, who with many of his companions were
settled on the banks of the river Chebar (q.v.). He also carried away all the
remaining treasures of the temple and the palace, and the golden vessels of
the sanctuary.
Mattaniah, the uncle of Jehoiachin, was now made king over what
remained of the kingdom of Judah, under the name of Zedekiah (2 Kings
24=>17; 2 Chronicles 36=>10). After a troubled reign of eleven years his
kingdom came to an end (2 Chronicles 36=>1 1). Nebuchadnezzar, with a
powerful army, besieged Jerusalem, and Zedekiah became a prisoner in
Babylon. His eyes were put out, and he was kept in close confinement till
his death (2 Kings 25=>7). The city was spoiled of all that was of value, and
then given up to the flames. The temple and palaces were consumed, and
the walls of the city were levelled with the ground (B.C. 586), and all that
remained of the people, except a number of the poorest class who were left
to till the ground and dress the vineyards, were carried away captives to
Babylon. This was the third and last deportation of Jewish captives. The
land was now utterly desolate, and was abondoned to anarchy.
In the first year of his reign as king of Babylon (B.C. 536), Cyrus issued a
decree liberating the Jewish captives, and permitting them to return to
Jerusalem and rebuild the city and the temple (2 Chronicles 36=>22, 23; Ezra
1; 2). The number of the people forming the first caravan, under
Zerubbabel, amounted in all to 42,360 (Ezra 2=>64, 65), besides 7,337
men-servants and maid-servants. A considerable number, 12,000 probably,
from the ten tribes who had been carried away into Assyria no doubt
combined with this band of liberated captives.
At a later period other bands of the Jews returned (1) under Ezra (7=>7)
(B.C. 458), and (2) Nehemiah (7=>66) (B.C. 445). But the great mass of the
people remained still in the land to which they had been carried, and
became a portion of the Jews of the “dispersion” (John 7=>35; 1 Peter 1=>1).
The whole number of the exiles that chose to remain was probably about
six times the number of those who returned.