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Sepharvaim
Sepharvaim
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Sepharvaim (Hebrew: סְפַרְוָיִם, romanizedSəp̄arvāyīm) was a city mentioned in the Bible as being captured by the Assyrians. It was taken by a king of Assyria, probably Sargon II, cited in the Hebrew Bible in 2 Kings 17:24, 31; 18:34; 19:13; and Isaiah 37:13). It was a double city, and received the common name Sepharvaim, i.e., "the two Sipparas", or "the two booktowns".

The Sippar on the east bank of the Euphrates is now called Abu-Habba; that on the other bank was Akkad, the old capital of Sargon I, where he established a great library. The recent discovery of cuneiform inscriptions at Amarna in Egypt, consisting of official despatches to Pharaoh Amenophis IV. and his predecessor from their agents in Canaan, leads some Egyptologists to conclude that an active literary intercourse was carried on between these nations, and that the medium of the correspondence was the Akkadian language and script.[citation needed] (See Kirjath Sepher.)

Sepharvaim was the center of the worship of the god Adrammelech. They also worshipped the god Anammelech. After the deportation of the Israelites to Assyria, at least some of the residents of this city were brought to Samaria to repopulate it with other Gentile settlers.[1]

References

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Attribution

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Wikisource This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainEaston, Matthew George (1897). "Sepharvaim". Easton's Bible Dictionary (New and revised ed.). T. Nelson and Sons.

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from Grokipedia
Sepharvaim, also known as Sephar-vaim or , was an ancient Babylonian city located near the in what is now modern-day , specifically at the of Tell Abu Habbah. It consisted of , of and of Anunitum, renowned as a of for deities including the sun and associated with the gods and . In biblical accounts, Sepharvaim is prominently mentioned as one of the cities from which King Sargon II of Assyria deported inhabitants to repopulate Samaria following the conquest of the Northern Kingdom of in 722 BCE. The city's historical significance extends to its role in Assyrian imperial policies, where its people, known as Sepharvites, were resettled in and continued their idolatrous practices, offering sacrifices to and by . Sepharvaim is also referenced in the context of Assyrian conquests under , listed among cities whose kings failed to withstand the , as noted in taunts against Judah's . Archaeologically, the site yielded important artifacts, including the (Imago Mundi), excavated in the late and now housed in the British Museum, highlighting its cultural importance in Mesopotamian civilization. While some scholars propose an alternative identification with Sibraim in Syria based on Ezekiel 47:16, the prevailing view links it firmly to the Babylonian Sippar due to its associations with other Mesopotamian cities like Babylon and Cuthah.

Biblical Mentions

References in 2 Kings

In the biblical narrative of 2 Kings 17, Sepharvaim is first mentioned in the context of the Assyrian conquest and subsequent resettlement of the Northern Kingdom of Israel following its fall during the reign of King Hoshea, the last ruler of Israel. After the Israelites were exiled to Assyria, the Assyrian king—identified historically as Sargon II—ordered the importation of foreign populations to repopulate the depopulated region of Samaria. Specifically, 2 Kings 17:24 records: "The king of Assyria brought people from Babylon, Cuthah, Avva, Hamath and Sepharvaim and settled them in the towns of Samaria to replace the Israelites. They took over Samaria and lived in its towns." This verse positions Sepharvaim as one of five key locations—alongside Babylon, Cuthah, Avva, and Hamath—from which settlers were deported to stabilize Assyrian control over the province. The events are dated to approximately 722 BCE, marking the siege and capture of Samaria after a three-year campaign that began in Hoshea's ninth regnal year. Sepharvaim is mentioned again later in the same chapter, in 2 Kings 17:31, describing the religious practices of the resettled peoples: "the people of Sepharvaim burned their children in the fire as sacrifices to and , the gods of Sepharvaim." This verse highlights the idolatrous customs brought by the Sepharvites to , contributing to the narrative of syncretism and divine displeasure. Sepharvaim appears again in 2 Kings 18, during the Assyrian invasion of Judah under , in a propagandistic speech by the Rabshakeh, the chief Assyrian cupbearer and military officer, aimed at demoralizing the defenders of Jerusalem. In 2 Kings 18:34, the Rabshakeh taunts the Judeans by invoking the failure of regional deities: "Where are the gods of Hamath and Arpad? Where are the gods of Sepharvaim, Hena and Ivvah? Have they rescued from my hand?" This rhetorical question references the prior Assyrian subjugation of Sepharvaim and its associated cities, emphasizing the impotence of their gods in preventing conquest and exile, much like the fate of itself. The speech occurs amid the broader Assyrian campaign against Judah around 701 BCE, serving to psychologically undermine reliance on divine protection or alliances. A parallel reference appears in the Assyrian letter to Hezekiah in 2 Kings 19:13, listing defeated kings: "Where is the king of Hamath or the king of Arpad? Where is the king of the city of Sepharvaim, Hena and Ivvah?" These references in 2 Kings frame Sepharvaim within the Assyrian empire's systematic deportations, where conquered populations from multiple regions, including Sepharvaim, were relocated to to foster and suppress native revolts through ethnic mixing—a policy evidenced in Assyrian royal inscriptions.

References in

In the , Sepharvaim appears in the of the during the reign of King , around 701 BCE, as part of the prophetic narrative depicting the between Judah and the Assyrian under . This account parallels the historical reporting in 2 Kings 18–19 but emphasizes 's theological rhetoric, portraying the Assyrian threats as blasphemous challenges to Yahweh's sovereignty. A key reference occurs in 36:19, where the , Sennacherib's chief , taunts the Judean defenders by questioning the of foreign deities: "Where are the gods of Hamath and Arpad? Where are the gods of Sepharvaim? And have they rescued from my hand?" This verse forms part of the Rabshakeh's speech aimed at demoralizing Jerusalem's inhabitants and undermining Hezekiah's reliance on , listing Sepharvaim alongside other conquered regions to boast of 's unchallenged conquests. The highlights the rhetorical irony: by invoking Sepharvaim's gods—presumably those of a Mesopotamian recently subdued by —the speaker equates with powerless idols, thereby escalating the prophetic tension between arrogance and divine power. The theme intensifies in 37:13, within the threatening letter delivered to , which enumerates defeated rulers to assert Assyrian invincibility: "Where is the king of Hamath or the king of Arpad? Where are the kings of Lair, Sepharvaim, Hena and Ivvah?" Here, Sepharvaim is cited not for its gods but as a symbol of royal overthrow, reinforcing the oracle's portrayal of Sennacherib's as a for . Scholarly analysis views this listing as a prophetic device to catalog Assyrian triumphs, drawing from historical Assyrian campaigns that subjugated such peripheral cities, yet ultimately serving to foreshadow the empire's downfall through Yahweh's intervention. These references underscore broader prophetic implications in , particularly the themes of on imperial powers and the futility of trusting in foreign gods or defeated kings. By juxtaposing Sepharvaim with Samaria's fall, the text critiques and , affirming Yahweh's uniqueness amid the 701 BCE crisis, where Assyrian claimed universal divine submission. The resolves with the of the Lord's destruction of the Assyrian ( 37:36), illustrating how such boasts precipitate , a motif central to Isaiah's oracles against the nations.

Historical Context

Assyrian Conquest and Resettlement

The Assyrian conquest of the Northern Kingdom of Israel unfolded in stages during the late 8th century BCE. Under , initial campaigns in 734–732 BCE targeted and Transjordan, resulting in the deportation of approximately 13,520 to , as recorded in his royal inscriptions. then besieged , the capital, beginning around 725 BCE, but it was who ultimately captured the city in 722 BCE, deporting 27,290 inhabitants according to his . These events marked the end of the independent Northern Kingdom and initiated widespread population displacement. The employed a systematic resettlement to consolidate control over conquered territories and suppress potential rebellions. This policy involved deporting native populations to distant regions while repopulating the vacated areas with settlers from other parts of the , thereby diluting ethnic and cultural cohesion. In the case of , deportees were sent to locations such as Halah, Gozan, and the cities of the , while foreigners were brought in to occupy the . served as one such source of these resettled , as noted in the biblical account of the events. Assyrian records, including Sargon's , corroborate this approach through descriptions of similar forced relocations following other conquests, such as the integration of deportees into provincial structures. Overall, the deportations affected tens of thousands of across the campaigns, with estimates exceeding when combining Tiglath-Pileser III's and Sargon II's actions. This massive upheaval, combined with the influx of foreign , facilitated the of the Samaritan through intermarriage, cultural hybridization, and shared to the . Archaeological and textual from Assyrian provincial administration supports this process, highlighting how such policies created new socio-ethnic identities in former Israelite territories.

Role in Assyrian Empire

Following its conquest by Sargon II in the late eighth century BCE, Sepharvaim was incorporated into the Assyrian Empire as a tributary urban center in the Babylonian region, contributing to imperial revenues through regular payments and resources extracted from its agricultural and commercial activities. Sargon's royal inscriptions detail how he liberated the city's inhabitants from Chaldean captors, restored their properties, and exempted them from corvée labor, thereby securing loyalty and ensuring steady economic output to support Assyrian administration. Sepharvaim played a significant role in the empire's resettlement policies, serving as a of deportees dispatched to repopulate provinces. In his , Sargon records deporting populations from Sepharvaim—alongside those from , Cuthah, Avva, and Hamath—to Samaria after its conquest in 722 BCE, replacing the exiled with settlers from Sepharvaim—alongside those from , Cuthah, Avva, and Hamath—to foster integration and prevent . This strategic relocation not only provided labor for Assyrian-controlled territories but also exemplified Sepharvaim's function as a demographic reservoir for stabilizing distant borders. Administratively, Sepharvaim functioned as a provincial hub under Assyrian oversight, with royal appointees managing its temples and trade routes to channel and troops toward imperial campaigns. Inscriptions highlight Sargon's provisioning of the city, including the return of seized images and fields, which reinforced its productivity and contributions to Assyrian efforts in the . Over time, these measures enhanced Assyrian dominance in , indirectly bolstering control over western provinces through reliable supply lines and mixed populations that diluted local resistances.

Etymology and Name

Linguistic Origins

The for Sepharvaim is rendered as שַׁפְרוָּאִים (Šap̄ruwʾîm) in scholarly transliterations, reflecting a dual form (-îm ) common in to denote pairs or twins, potentially indicating "the two Sippars" as a reference to a divided or dual urban entity. This construction aligns with grammatical patterns for dual nouns, emphasizing multiplicity without implying a literal pair of identical cities. Linguistically, the term connects to the Akkadian and Babylonian designation siparru (or variants like Šiparru), the name of an ancient Mesopotamian city center associated with solar worship, particularly the god Šamaš (Akkadian for the sun deity). While the precise etymology of siparru remains uncertain in Sumerian origins (possibly from Zimbir), it evokes connotations of radiance or celestial elements tied to Šamaš's domain, rather than direct lexical meanings like "city of the bird," which lack attestation in primary cuneiform sources. Aramaic influences may appear in regional phonetic adaptations, as Aramean dialects prevalent in northern Mesopotamia could have shaped transcriptions through shared Northwest Semitic roots, though no specific Aramaic cognate for the base šap̄r- is definitively linked. Ancient transcriptions vary, with the Greek Septuagint rendering it as Σεφφαρουαΐμ (Sepharouaím) or similar forms like Σεπφαραΐμ, adapting the Hebrew to Koine phonology while preserving the dual implication. These variations highlight the name's Semitic roots transitioning into Hellenistic contexts, without altering its core dual structure.

Interpretations in Ancient Sources

In Assyrian cuneiform inscriptions, Sepharvaim is not mentioned by name, but the city of Sippar—a major Mesopotamian center associated with the god Shamash—appears frequently in the royal annals of Sargon II (r. 721–705 BCE), who is credited with the conquest of Samaria and the deportation of its inhabitants. These texts describe Sargon re-establishing privileges for Sippar, freeing its citizens from captivity imposed by Babylonian rulers, and maintaining order there by subduing raiding tribes that had fled into the city. Such references portray Sippar as a key urban hub under Assyrian oversight, from which populations could be mobilized for resettlement policies in conquered western territories like Samaria. Greco-Roman geographers later situated a place akin to Sepharvaim in near the . In Ptolemy's (ca. 150 CE), Sipphara is listed among villages and cities along the Euphrates below , positioned at coordinates 78°15' and 35°40' , marking it as a southern Mesopotamian locale in the division of the river's flow toward . This placement aligns with interpretations of Sepharvaim as a dual-city site (possibly the two Sippars: one for Shamash and one for Anunit), emphasizing its role in regional trade and administration during the Hellenistic period. Early Jewish historiographical and rabbinic traditions interpreted Sepharvaim as a primary source of foreign settlers deported to Samaria after the Assyrian conquest, portraying its inhabitants as bearers of idolatrous cults that corrupted local worship. Flavius Josephus, in Jewish Antiquities (ca. 94 CE), recounts how the Assyrian king brought Cutheans from Cuthah in Persia along with peoples from four other nations—including implicitly Sepharvaim—to repopulate Samaria; these newcomers initially worshipped their native gods, incurring divine punishment through plagues until they adopted partial observance of Israelite laws while retaining syncretic practices. Similarly, the Babylonian Talmud (e.g., Chullin 6a) refers to the Samaritans (termed Kutim after Cuthah but encompassing deportees from Sepharvaim and kindred sites) as prone to idolatry, accusing them of concealing pagan images beneath Mount Gerizim and bowing to them covertly despite outward adherence to Torah commandments. A notable linguistic connection appears in ancient biblical translations, where the Syriac Peshitta (ca. 2nd–5th centuries CE) renders Sibraim in Ezekiel 47:16—the boundary marker between Damascus and Hamath—as Sepharvaim, suggesting an early interpretive tradition equating the two names as variants of a Syrian-Mesopotamian toponym linked to dual settlements or fortified sites. This variant underscores Sepharvaim's perceived role in delineating imperial frontiers in post-exilic visionary literature.

Modern Identification

Proposed Locations

The primary scholarly theory identifies Sepharvaim with the twin cities of Sippar (Akkadian Šūpûr or Zimbir) in central Mesopotamia, located near the modern site of Abu Habba in Iraq, approximately 20 kilometers southwest of Baghdad on the eastern bank of the Euphrates River. This identification, first proposed by G. R. Driver, accounts for the dual form "Sepharvaim" (Hebrew סְפַרְוָיִם) as reflecting the two adjacent settlements: Sippar of Shamash (the sun god) and Sippar of Anunitum (a form of Ishtar), which were administratively distinct but often treated as a single entity in Assyrian records. Supporting evidence includes the biblical listing of Sepharvaim alongside Babylonian locales like Babylon and Cuthah in 2 Kings 17:24, aligning with Assyrian deportation practices from southern Mesopotamian centers during the reign of Sargon II (722–705 BCE). Assyrian inscriptions, such as those from the Murasu Archive at Nippur, reference a place URU Si-pi-ra-’-ni, interpreted as an Aramaic rendering of Sepharvaim, further corroborating this Mesopotamian placement. Additionally, Sennacherib's annals mention a "Sa-par-ri-e" in the Bit-Awukani region east of Erech, potentially linked to Sepharvaim as a variant name for Sippar under Assyrian control. While debate persists due to the "king" reference in biblical texts and associations with Hamath, the identification with Sippar is widely accepted by scholars, strengthened by cuneiform evidence. An alternative identification places Sepharvaim at Sibraim (Hebrew סִבְרָיִם), a site in the region of , positioned between and Hamath as described in 47:16. This proposal, advanced by scholars like Halévy, draws on the biblical association of Sepharvaim with Hamath in the Assyrian taunt passages of 2 Kings 18:34, 19:13, and parallels in 36:19, 37:13, suggesting a northwestern Syrian context rather than deep Mesopotamian. Proponents argue that the mention of a "king of Sepharvaim" implies a polity with royal governance, unlike Sippar, which by the late 8th century BCE was governed by a nāṣiku (tribal overseer) rather than a king, potentially fitting a smaller Syrian principality better. However, critics note linguistic and geographical mismatches, as Sibraim's border location in does not align with the deportation roster in 2 Kings 17:24, which groups Sepharvaim with eastern sites like Avva. No direct archaeological evidence confirms Sibraim's location or ties it to deportations. Less commonly, some suggest connections to Saparrê or Sipirani south of Nippur in Chaldea, viewing them as variant Mesopotamian locales distinct from the main Sippar but still within Babylonian territory. Evaluating these theories involves weighing biblical geography against historical records: the pairing with Babylon and Cuthah favors a Mesopotamian Sippar, consistent with Assyrian conquest routes from the east, while proximity to Hamath supports Syrian options like Sibraim, possibly indicating a secondary deportation from the Levant.

Archaeological Connections

Excavations at Tell Abu Habba, as the ancient city of (modern ), provide the primary archaeological basis for linking Sepharvaim to a Mesopotamian urban center. Conducted by on behalf of the from to , these digs targeted the temple of (Ebabbar) and adjacent structures, revealing stratified layers from the Neo-Babylonian period back to earlier Assyrian phases. Rassam uncovered approximately 50,000 tablets, primarily administrative and economic records, alongside foundation deposits and temple artifacts that attest to Sippar's role as a major religious and commercial hub under Assyrian influence. Among the findings, cuneiform annals of Sargon II (r. 721–705 BCE) explicitly mention the conquest of Sippar in his 13th regnal year (ca. 709 BCE), describing military campaigns that involved plundering and control over Babylonian cities, consistent with patterns of deportation from such centers. Additional artifacts, including limestone boundary stones (kudurru) inscribed with legal grants and divine symbols from the late second millennium BCE onward, highlight Sippar's integration into Mesopotamian territorial and economic systems during the Assyrian era, though these predate Sargon's reign. Despite these connections, a significant challenge persists: no excavated inscription directly names "Sepharvaim," relying instead on etymological equations between the biblical term and Akkadian "Sippar" (or its dual form for the twin cities of Sippar-Yahrurum and Sippar-Amnanum). Alternative identifications like Sibraim lack confirmed archaeological sites or evidence of Assyrian deportations.

References

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