BIBLE HISTORY DAILY

Hezekiah’s Tunnel Reexamined

The dates assigned the Siloam Inscription and Jerusalem tunnels are questioned

A young boy wades through Hezekiah’s Tunnel, the most famous of the Jerusalem tunnels. The image brings to mind the discovery of the Siloam Inscription—located at the southern end of Hezekiah’s Tunnel—by a youth in 1880. Photo: Hershel Shanks.

Hezekiah’s Tunnel, part of Jerusalem’s water system, is located under the City of David. It connects the Gihon Spring—Jerusalem’s fresh water supply—with the Siloam Pool. According to 2 Chronicles 32:2–4 and 2 Kings 20:20, this tunnel was dug during the reign of King Hezekiah of Judah to prepare Jerusalem for the imminent attack of the Assyrian king, Sennacherib. In the Bible, Hezekiah redirected the water through old and newly dug Jerusalem tunnels. However, many have wondered if Hezekiah’s Tunnel was actually dug by Hezekiah at the end of the eighth century B.C.E. (Iron Age II). In the September/October 2013 issue of BAR, editor Hershel Shanks reviews the evidence for the dating of the Jerusalem tunnels in “Will King Hezekiah Be Dislodged from His Tunnel?

The first argument for re-dating the tunnel concerns the Siloam Inscription. Found at the southern end of Hezekiah’s Tunnel, the Siloam Inscription recounts how the men digging the tunnel worked in two directions—one from the north, the other from the south—and met in the middle. The Siloam Inscription does not name Hezekiah or Sennacherib I, the Sennacherib in the Bible, which would simplify matters. While most scholars attribute the Siloam Inscription to the Iron Age II, John Rogerson and Philip Davies argue that it is actually Hasmonean, which raises the question: Which period is a better fit for the Siloam Inscription?

FREE ebook: Jerusalem Archaeology: Exposing the Biblical City Read about some of the city’s most groundbreaking excavations.

* Indicates a required field.
hezekiah-plan

As described in the Siloam Inscription, Hezekiah’s Tunnel was dug by two teams, who worked in opposite directions and met in the middle, to prepare for the invasion of Sennacherib. In the Bible, this impressive feat is detailed in 2 Chronicles 32:2–4.

The second argument concerns the amount of time it would have taken to dig Hezekiah’s Tunnel. Based on the type of rock in Jerusalem tunnels, geologists Amihai Sneh, Eyal Shalev and Ram Weinberger contend that Hezekiah’s Tunnel could have been hewn in no less than four years. Did Hezekiah have time to dig the tunnel before the arrival of Sennacherib? In the Bible, it does not specify the amount of time between the threat of attack and the siege itself, but Assyrian records shed light on the matter. (In the Bible History Daily web-exclusive discussion Regarding Recent Suggestions Redating the Siloam Tunnel, leading archaeologists Aren Maeir and Jeffrey Chadwick propose that Hezekiah had ample time to construct the tunnel during the revolt against Assyria.)

The final argument hinges on the relationship of the various channels of the water system in Jerusalem. Tunnels were dug in very different periods, ranging from the Middle Bronze Age to the Second Temple period.

Ronny Reich and Eli Shukron, who have excavated the City of David near the Gihon Spring extensively, believe that the starting point of Hezekiah’s Tunnel was Tunnel IV, which is connected to the Round Chamber of the Rock-cut Pool. At the entrance to Tunnel IV from the Rock-cut Pool there is a place that had been smoothed for a plaque. The similarity between this plaque and the Siloam Inscription supports the idea that Tunnel IV marked the beginning of Hezekiah’s Tunnel, just as the Siloam Inscription marked its end.

A house built on top of rubble fill, which blocked the entrance to Tunnel IV, was found in the Round Chamber. Some of the pottery in the fill under the house dates to the late ninth–early eighth century B.C.E. (Iron Age IIa)—which predates the time of Hezekiah by nearly a hundred years. Based on this pottery, Reich and Shukron date the house to the late ninth or early eighth century B.C.E. as well.

hezekiah-water-system-plan

In Jerusalem, tunnels—numerous and crisscrossing—of the water system are difficult to keep straight, but through their excavations in the subterranean levels of the City of David, Ronny Reich and Eli Shukron have mapped out the Jerusalem tunnels. The Siloam, or Hezekiah’s, Tunnel connects to the Gihon Spring via Tunnel VI. Reich and Shukron believe that the starting point of Hezekiah’s Tunnel was in Tunnel IV.

According to the rules of deposition, Tunnel IV and Hezekiah’s Tunnel had to predate this house since debris underneath the house were used to block Tunnel IV. Additionally, if the two channels had not been dug, water would have continued to flow into the Rock-cut Pool, and the house would have been underwater. On this basis, Reich and Shukron argue that Tunnel IV and Hezekiah’s Tunnel must have been constructed by one of Hezekiah’s predecessors, dating as early as the time of King Jehoash (835–801 B.C.E.)—a century before Sennacherib’s siege of Jerusalem in 701 B.C.E.

Is Jehoash actually responsible for “Hezekiah’s” Tunnel?

——
Subscribers: Read Hershel Shanks’s full article “Will King Hezekiah Be Dislodged from His Tunnel?” by BAR as it appears in the September/October 2013 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review.

Not a BAS Library or All-Access Member yet? Join today.

FREE ebook: Jerusalem Archaeology: Exposing the Biblical City Read about some of the city’s most groundbreaking excavations.

* Indicates a required field.

Read more in Bible History Daily:

Hezekiah’s Tunnel

Hezekiah’s Tunnel Revisited

Ancient Reservoir Provided Water for First Temple Period Jerusalem


This Bible History Daily feature was originally published on August 23, 2013.


Get more biblical Archaeology: Become a Member

The world of the Bible is knowable. We can learn about the society where the ancient Israelites, and later Jesus and the Apostles, lived through the modern discoveries that provide us clues.

Biblical Archaeology Review is the guide on that fascinating journey. Here is your ticket to join us as we discover more and more about the biblical world and its people.

Each issue of Biblical Archaeology Review features lavishly illustrated and easy-to-understand articles such as:

• Fascinating finds from the Hebrew Bible and New Testament periods

• The latest scholarship by the world's greatest archaeologists and distinguished scholars

• Stunning color photographs, informative maps, and diagrams

• BAR's unique departments

• Reviews of the latest books on biblical archaeology

The BAS Digital Library includes:

• 45+ years of Biblical Archaeology Review

• 20+ years of Bible Review online, providing critical interpretations of biblical texts

• 8 years of Archaeology Odyssey online, exploring the ancient roots of the Western world in a scholarly and entertaining way,

• The New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land

• Video lectures from world-renowned experts.

• Access to 50+ curated Special Collections,

• Four highly acclaimed books, published in conjunction with the Smithsonian Institution: Aspects of Monotheism, Feminist Approaches to the Bible, The Rise of Ancient Israel and The Search for Jesus.

The All-Access membership pass is the way to get to know the Bible through biblical archaeology.

Related Posts


26 Responses

  1. […] then explored theCity of David excavations and got wet walking through Hezekiah’sTunnels.  The kids absolutely loved the tunnels!  We went back to our hotel before a dinner out […]

  2. […] One article argues that such a project would have taken four years to complete. If the attack of the Assyrians was imminent, how could Hezekiah complete it in time? […]

  3. Gary says:

    An observation upon reading 2 Kings 20: v. 20 and 2 Chronicles 2: vs. 2-5: I don’t read that Hezekiah built the tunnel before the siege of Sennacherib as is being assumed here. All these passages say is that Hezekiah and the people blocked off the springs before Sennacherib arrived so that the Assyrians wouldn’t find abundant water. He may have built the tunnel after the siege which would have allowed him much more time. Why is it assumed that he built the tunnel quickly before the siege? Scripture never tells us he did this. Am I missing something?

  4. Barry Nickerson says:

    They probably got the “fill” from the city dump (read Kidron Valley).

  5. Sammy says:

    Awesomeness

  6. Jacob D says:

    Mark writes: “Thus the tunnel has to be older then the fill, if the fill was used to block the tunnel so-as the house would not flood and be under water.”

    Your assumption here is that the fill material itself dates to the time of deposition of the fill in the tunnel. But fill material would probably have been old sherds and debris that the workmen would have had no problem disposing of as a means to block the tunnel.
    Think about it. There are old churches in Greece incorporating (i.e. reusing) stones that had been part of structures dating to the pagan era of ancient Greece hundreds of years before the arrival of Christianity in Greece. Does that mean that the church itself was built in, say, 200 BCE, simply because the oldest stone used in its construction dates to that time?

  7. Brian says:

    There is evidence to suggest that the tunnel was built to divert water into the first temple which was built by Solomon in the City of David (not Jerusalem). The water was used for the priest’s ritual bath (Mikveh) and to clean the alter after sacrifices. I believe the Temple Mount was actually the Roman fortress. Josephus reported that the Roman built a 600′ dual-bridge between the southern wall of the fortress and the Temple so the soldiers could quickly get from their positions to the temple if needed. 600′ south of the Temple Mount puts you right over Hezekiah’s Tunnel which was likely in the middle of the temple.

  8. Tracy says:

    I’m new to this site, and I must say how wonderful the discussions are, by all of you. You’re all insightful and intelligent, and l thoroughly enjoy time spent here…

  9. romanus o.o says:

    I’m just so inspired of it all.

  10. Kurt says:

    Did King Hezekiah really build a tunnel into Jerusalem?

    Hezekiah was a king of Judah in the late eighth century B.C.E., a time of conflict with the mighty Assyrian power. The Bible tells us that he did a great deal to protect Jerusalem and to secure its water supply. Among the works he undertook was the construction of a 1,749-foot-long [533 m] tunnel, or conduit, to bring springwater into the city.—2 Kings 20:20; 2 Chronicles 32:1-7, 30.

    In the 19th century, just such a tunnel was discovered. It became known as Hezekiah’s Tunnel, or the Siloam Tunnel. Inside the tunnel, an inscription was found that described the final phases of the tunnel’s excavation. The shape and form of the letters of this inscription lead most scholars to date it to the time of Hezekiah. A decade ago, however, some suggested that the tunnel was built about 500 years later. In 2003, a team of Israeli scientists published the results of their research aimed at fixing a reliable date for the tunnel. What conclusion did they reach?

    Dr. Amos Frumkin of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem says: “The carbon-14 tests we carried out on organic material within the plaster of the Siloam Tunnel, and uranium-thorium dating of stalactites found in the tunnel, date it conclusively to Hezekiah’s era.” An article in the scientific journal Nature adds: “The three independent lines of evidence—radiometric dating, palaeography and the historical record—all converge on about 700 BC, rendering the Siloam Tunnel the best-dated Iron-Age biblical structure thus far known.”
    http://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/1200272697

  11. Herb Burack says:

    So here we go again, as President Ronald Reagen used to say. Or something to that effect. At any rate about 15 years ago, a paper was published in the journal, Science, by two archaeologists from Hebrew U. They were trying to date when the tunnel was built based upon carnon dating, flora etc. Guess what? Their results were the same as written in the Tanach. By Chizkayahu. End of story.

  12. Tammy says:

    An article in the scientific journal Nature adds: “The three independent lines of evidence—radiometric dating, palaeography and the historical record—all converge on about 700 BC, rendering the Siloam Tunnel the best-dated Iron-Age biblical structure thus far known.”

  13. SCH says:

    An article in the scientific journal Nature adds: “The three independent lines of evidence—radiometric dating, palaeography and the historical record—all converge on about 700 BC, rendering the Siloam Tunnel the best-dated Iron-Age biblical structure thus far known.”

    http://www.biblicalarchaeologytruth.com/hezekiahs-tunnel.html
    Show s that the book by Ronny Reich’s Excavating the City of David went overboard easily explaing the house on top information does put the tunnel to Hezekiah time.

    Concerning Ronny Reich’s Excavating the City of David … Time for a book burning event!

  14. SCH says:

    How com you don’t look at Dr. Amos Frumkin of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem set out in 2003 to to get a reliable date by carbon-14 … the result put it right at Hezekiah Time. The book is by Ronny Reich’s Excavating the City of David is worthless!

    Just how many idiots out there will try to discredit the Bible?

    1. Brenda Dawson says:

      I agree. Scientist do not always get things right. If it is written in the Bible which is God’s word that is good enough for me. With God’s help everything can be done.

  15. joseph says:

    yeah i support what the 7th person explained,on my own side i see no reason to argue what is in the bible,because if they where not real then,it will not be there.

  16. Did the Reed Sea Crossing Really Happen? - Page 4 - Christian Chat Rooms & Forums says:

    […] city wall, inside the city to a pool on the opposite side of the ridge. In the years that followed, “Hezekiah’s Tunnel” continued to carry fresh water to this section of Jerusalem, and different pools were built here […]

  17. Biblical Prophecy part 1 | Biblical Views and World Economics says:

    […]  Seven Lean years tradition,  Shalmaneser’s Black Obelisk,  Shishak’s Geographical Lists,  Siloam Inscription,  Sinuhe’Story, Tale of Two Brothers, Wenamun’s […]

  18. Jon L says:

    Another possibility is that some earlier kings had set out on this task before Hezekiah — [we know the Canaanites had already dug their own tunnel to the Gihon] — only for these kings to find it too costly to see it through to completion. Perhaps, Hezekiah was the first king to have the resources and the impending need to see this project to its end. This would resolve issues of rubble and pottery that predate King Hezekiah, which may exist due to earlier, failed attempts. It also helps with the time-frame of finishing the project, if say, the project was already a third of the way complete when Hezekiah took over. (Just a thought).

  19. UVa says:

    Sounds to me like someone just wants to try moving the dates. Do you people seriously think ancient scribes would write of a certain king (Hezekiah) building a tunnel in their most beloved book (to be read by other ancient people of the time), if it were not so? Anyone of ancient times would have known better, and would have also known who had it built.

  20. Dan says:

    It’s quite common in building practice today to use excavated material from one site as fill in another; it’s cost-effective and efficient. If, as the article seems to suggest, the fill was used as foundational material for the structure (not derived from the structure), it’s not unreasonable to suppose the fill could include material that pre-dates the tunnel.

  21. Mark Brindle says:

    Saundra, you make a very good point about dating areas by pottery: since the occupants could have kept generational family heirlooms (pottery) for possibly century’s. However, in this instance the pottery that was dated was found in the fill used as the foundation for the home and not part of the housewares thereof. Quoting the article, “Some of the pottery in the fill under the house dates to the late ninth–early eighth century B.C.E. (Iron Age IIa)—which predates the time of Hezekiah by nearly a hundred years.” Thus the tunnel has to be older then the fill, if the fill was used to block the tunnel so-as the house would not flood and be under water.

  22. Clive says:

    I would think that preserving pottery for several generations would be the norm in ancient times. It is only in recent centuries that we have become a throw-away society

  23. daSilva says:

    Is it plausible that people in the 8th century BCE would preserve pottery from centuries earlier?

  24. Sandra Landwersiek says:

    Dating based on the oldest piece of pottery found seems to forget one ancient human custom. I have several artifacts in my home from ancestors several generations back. If a tornado destroyed my home and they based it on the oldest evidence in the pile, they would be off by more than a hundred years of the correct date of my home. “Some” pieces dating to an earlier period could be treasured family heirlooms of the homeowner kept for may years.

Write a Reply or Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


26 Responses

  1. […] then explored theCity of David excavations and got wet walking through Hezekiah’sTunnels.  The kids absolutely loved the tunnels!  We went back to our hotel before a dinner out […]

  2. […] One article argues that such a project would have taken four years to complete. If the attack of the Assyrians was imminent, how could Hezekiah complete it in time? […]

  3. Gary says:

    An observation upon reading 2 Kings 20: v. 20 and 2 Chronicles 2: vs. 2-5: I don’t read that Hezekiah built the tunnel before the siege of Sennacherib as is being assumed here. All these passages say is that Hezekiah and the people blocked off the springs before Sennacherib arrived so that the Assyrians wouldn’t find abundant water. He may have built the tunnel after the siege which would have allowed him much more time. Why is it assumed that he built the tunnel quickly before the siege? Scripture never tells us he did this. Am I missing something?

  4. Barry Nickerson says:

    They probably got the “fill” from the city dump (read Kidron Valley).

  5. Sammy says:

    Awesomeness

  6. Jacob D says:

    Mark writes: “Thus the tunnel has to be older then the fill, if the fill was used to block the tunnel so-as the house would not flood and be under water.”

    Your assumption here is that the fill material itself dates to the time of deposition of the fill in the tunnel. But fill material would probably have been old sherds and debris that the workmen would have had no problem disposing of as a means to block the tunnel.
    Think about it. There are old churches in Greece incorporating (i.e. reusing) stones that had been part of structures dating to the pagan era of ancient Greece hundreds of years before the arrival of Christianity in Greece. Does that mean that the church itself was built in, say, 200 BCE, simply because the oldest stone used in its construction dates to that time?

  7. Brian says:

    There is evidence to suggest that the tunnel was built to divert water into the first temple which was built by Solomon in the City of David (not Jerusalem). The water was used for the priest’s ritual bath (Mikveh) and to clean the alter after sacrifices. I believe the Temple Mount was actually the Roman fortress. Josephus reported that the Roman built a 600′ dual-bridge between the southern wall of the fortress and the Temple so the soldiers could quickly get from their positions to the temple if needed. 600′ south of the Temple Mount puts you right over Hezekiah’s Tunnel which was likely in the middle of the temple.

  8. Tracy says:

    I’m new to this site, and I must say how wonderful the discussions are, by all of you. You’re all insightful and intelligent, and l thoroughly enjoy time spent here…

  9. romanus o.o says:

    I’m just so inspired of it all.

  10. Kurt says:

    Did King Hezekiah really build a tunnel into Jerusalem?

    Hezekiah was a king of Judah in the late eighth century B.C.E., a time of conflict with the mighty Assyrian power. The Bible tells us that he did a great deal to protect Jerusalem and to secure its water supply. Among the works he undertook was the construction of a 1,749-foot-long [533 m] tunnel, or conduit, to bring springwater into the city.—2 Kings 20:20; 2 Chronicles 32:1-7, 30.

    In the 19th century, just such a tunnel was discovered. It became known as Hezekiah’s Tunnel, or the Siloam Tunnel. Inside the tunnel, an inscription was found that described the final phases of the tunnel’s excavation. The shape and form of the letters of this inscription lead most scholars to date it to the time of Hezekiah. A decade ago, however, some suggested that the tunnel was built about 500 years later. In 2003, a team of Israeli scientists published the results of their research aimed at fixing a reliable date for the tunnel. What conclusion did they reach?

    Dr. Amos Frumkin of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem says: “The carbon-14 tests we carried out on organic material within the plaster of the Siloam Tunnel, and uranium-thorium dating of stalactites found in the tunnel, date it conclusively to Hezekiah’s era.” An article in the scientific journal Nature adds: “The three independent lines of evidence—radiometric dating, palaeography and the historical record—all converge on about 700 BC, rendering the Siloam Tunnel the best-dated Iron-Age biblical structure thus far known.”
    http://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/1200272697

  11. Herb Burack says:

    So here we go again, as President Ronald Reagen used to say. Or something to that effect. At any rate about 15 years ago, a paper was published in the journal, Science, by two archaeologists from Hebrew U. They were trying to date when the tunnel was built based upon carnon dating, flora etc. Guess what? Their results were the same as written in the Tanach. By Chizkayahu. End of story.

  12. Tammy says:

    An article in the scientific journal Nature adds: “The three independent lines of evidence—radiometric dating, palaeography and the historical record—all converge on about 700 BC, rendering the Siloam Tunnel the best-dated Iron-Age biblical structure thus far known.”

  13. SCH says:

    An article in the scientific journal Nature adds: “The three independent lines of evidence—radiometric dating, palaeography and the historical record—all converge on about 700 BC, rendering the Siloam Tunnel the best-dated Iron-Age biblical structure thus far known.”

    http://www.biblicalarchaeologytruth.com/hezekiahs-tunnel.html
    Show s that the book by Ronny Reich’s Excavating the City of David went overboard easily explaing the house on top information does put the tunnel to Hezekiah time.

    Concerning Ronny Reich’s Excavating the City of David … Time for a book burning event!

  14. SCH says:

    How com you don’t look at Dr. Amos Frumkin of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem set out in 2003 to to get a reliable date by carbon-14 … the result put it right at Hezekiah Time. The book is by Ronny Reich’s Excavating the City of David is worthless!

    Just how many idiots out there will try to discredit the Bible?

    1. Brenda Dawson says:

      I agree. Scientist do not always get things right. If it is written in the Bible which is God’s word that is good enough for me. With God’s help everything can be done.

  15. joseph says:

    yeah i support what the 7th person explained,on my own side i see no reason to argue what is in the bible,because if they where not real then,it will not be there.

  16. Did the Reed Sea Crossing Really Happen? - Page 4 - Christian Chat Rooms & Forums says:

    […] city wall, inside the city to a pool on the opposite side of the ridge. In the years that followed, “Hezekiah’s Tunnel” continued to carry fresh water to this section of Jerusalem, and different pools were built here […]

  17. Biblical Prophecy part 1 | Biblical Views and World Economics says:

    […]  Seven Lean years tradition,  Shalmaneser’s Black Obelisk,  Shishak’s Geographical Lists,  Siloam Inscription,  Sinuhe’Story, Tale of Two Brothers, Wenamun’s […]

  18. Jon L says:

    Another possibility is that some earlier kings had set out on this task before Hezekiah — [we know the Canaanites had already dug their own tunnel to the Gihon] — only for these kings to find it too costly to see it through to completion. Perhaps, Hezekiah was the first king to have the resources and the impending need to see this project to its end. This would resolve issues of rubble and pottery that predate King Hezekiah, which may exist due to earlier, failed attempts. It also helps with the time-frame of finishing the project, if say, the project was already a third of the way complete when Hezekiah took over. (Just a thought).

  19. UVa says:

    Sounds to me like someone just wants to try moving the dates. Do you people seriously think ancient scribes would write of a certain king (Hezekiah) building a tunnel in their most beloved book (to be read by other ancient people of the time), if it were not so? Anyone of ancient times would have known better, and would have also known who had it built.

  20. Dan says:

    It’s quite common in building practice today to use excavated material from one site as fill in another; it’s cost-effective and efficient. If, as the article seems to suggest, the fill was used as foundational material for the structure (not derived from the structure), it’s not unreasonable to suppose the fill could include material that pre-dates the tunnel.

  21. Mark Brindle says:

    Saundra, you make a very good point about dating areas by pottery: since the occupants could have kept generational family heirlooms (pottery) for possibly century’s. However, in this instance the pottery that was dated was found in the fill used as the foundation for the home and not part of the housewares thereof. Quoting the article, “Some of the pottery in the fill under the house dates to the late ninth–early eighth century B.C.E. (Iron Age IIa)—which predates the time of Hezekiah by nearly a hundred years.” Thus the tunnel has to be older then the fill, if the fill was used to block the tunnel so-as the house would not flood and be under water.

  22. Clive says:

    I would think that preserving pottery for several generations would be the norm in ancient times. It is only in recent centuries that we have become a throw-away society

  23. daSilva says:

    Is it plausible that people in the 8th century BCE would preserve pottery from centuries earlier?

  24. Sandra Landwersiek says:

    Dating based on the oldest piece of pottery found seems to forget one ancient human custom. I have several artifacts in my home from ancestors several generations back. If a tornado destroyed my home and they based it on the oldest evidence in the pile, they would be off by more than a hundred years of the correct date of my home. “Some” pieces dating to an earlier period could be treasured family heirlooms of the homeowner kept for may years.

Write a Reply or Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Send this to a friend