I think the Shishak/Sheshonk identification is pretty unanimous. The only people who really question this are idiots like David Rohl or crackpots like Velikovsky, who have an obvious religious agenda to alter Near Eastern chronology in order to reinterpret certain archeological findings to line up with the Biblical accounts. If there are any serious, mainstream scholars who question this identification, I'm not aware of them.Thanas wrote:If we accept he is the same Pharaoh mentioned in the bible, an identification that, while being the majority view, is not really unanimous. As for synchronizing him with events in Mesopotamia or in the Levant, I would argue that since we have several inscriptions in the levant from him as well as the depictions and reliefs at his temples, they might not be that important. However, I'd be the first to admit that I have not done extensive study there, so if you know more than I do, feel free to correct me.
Look at it this way: suppose as an analogy we say the Iliad and the Old Testament are both paintings. The Iliad would appear as an amorphous, shadowy picture defined with very broad strokes. It might convey to us an overall mood or atmosphere, but very little in the way of any fine details. The Old Testament, on the other hand, would have many fine strokes, conveying a lot of specific imagery, even if most of it is contorted or exaggerated.Thanas wrote:I would say that the value of those events are largely conjecture and the verifications usually seem to rely on assumptions. In any case, verifications by other sources usually leads to the bible stories having to be substantially modified, as in the case of moses I quoted above.Channel72 wrote:But many specific events in the Old Testament actually happened, because we can verify them through other sources. Therefore, my point stands that the Old Testament is far more historically "correct" than the Iliad, and so it's wrong to compare the two on that basis.
The fact is, many of the events in Kings, Ezra and Nehemiah are confirmed by other sources, and probably happened pretty much exactly as they were described in the Old Testament. Consider, for example, King Ahaz's appeal to Tiglath-Pileser III to help him fight against Northern Israel and Damascus, followed by the humiliating requirement that he pay tribute to Assyria and erect an altar to the Assyrian gods in Jerusalem. There seems to be little or no exaggeration in the Old Testament account, because the Assyrian records tell the same story.
One of the advantages of the Hebrew theological framework was that it easily allowed for the nation of Israel to suffer humiliating defeats. The Hebrew theologians simply interpreted this as a manifestation of Yahweh's anger. Consequently, the Hebrews rarely tried to modify or cover-up unfavorable events which happened to Israel. Compare this with, say, the Egyptians, who simply lied when they lost a battle (c.f. the battle of Kadesh).
So, a lot of the political events described in Kings, Ezra and Nehemiah probably happened exactly as recounted. Again, I'm not saying that every political event in Kings happened exactly as recounted; obviously the supernatural defeat of Sennacherib's army is an exaggeration or an outright lie, and all the Elijah/Elisha stories are probably 99% fabrications. But the majority of political events described in Kings, from the Omri dynasty onwards, seem to be more or less historically accurate. So in that regard, the Old Testament is far more useful as an historical record than the Iliad.
Bronze-Age chariots were initially an Indo-European weapon imported to the Mediterranean via the Hittites and other Indo-European peoples. They were clearly not used as war-taxis, but rather were used in actual combat. This is made obvious through countless reliefs and descriptions of chariot combat by New Kingdom Egyptian records as well as evidence from excavations at the Hittite capital of Hattusa.Thanas wrote:Well, the Mycenaean period is a period encompassing at its end an overlap of bronze and iron age tactics. However, as far as I know, the practice of champion combat was still used. Nevermind kings having hetairoi, the practice and importance of ships, the descriptions of meals taken together, practices regarding captured cities and the division of booty....
As for the chariots, AFAIK Mycenaean chariots were not really used predominantly in combat but did indeed serve as glorified taxis (though take note that there is at least one passage in the Illias where chariot combat is mentioned, iirc). Feel free to cite a study saying otherwise, though, as I noted, Mycenaean Greece is something I do not focus on.
However, I have to admit that their usage in Mycenaean Greece is not clear. According to The Cambridge Companion to Homer, which cites a study (Crouwel, J. Chariots and Other Means of Land Transport in Bronze Age Greece), Mycenaean reliefs provide evidence that chariots were used for transportation, but there is no evidence they were used in war. Suffice it to say, there is no evidence for the Homeric "war-taxis", but there is also no evidence for traditional, Hittite-style chariot combat either. I would argue that it's highly likely that even if the Bronze Age Greeks didn't use chariots for war, the Trojans would use traditional Hittite-style chariot combat, given their proximity to the Hittite empire, and so Homer is probably wrong about that.