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For more information on Saul, visit Britannica.com.
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| Biography: Saul |
The first king of Israel, Saul (reigned ca. 1020-1000 B.C.) was a man of valor who brought the virtues of modesty and generosity to his office.
The youngest son of Kish of the tribe of Benjamin, Saul was a modest shepherd boy, a resident of Gibeah, when the prophet Samuel, after a chance meeting, secretly chose and anointed him king of Israel. It was a period of national humiliation, for the Philistines had defeated the Israelites at Shiloh and captured the Ark of the Covenant, which symbolized the presence of God in their midst. This calamity convinced the Israelites that they must either strive for national unity with a king as leader or face complete and permanent subjugation.
Saul succeeded in freeing Israel of its enemies and extending its boundaries. He fought successfully against the Philistines, Ammonites, Moabites, Edomites, Arameans, and Amalekites. He also succeeded in drawing the tribes of Israel into a closer unity.
Saul's initial conflict with Samuel occurred after Saul offered a sacrifice to God, thereby assuming Samuel's office. Samuel rebuked Saul and proclaimed that Saul's dynasty would not be continued on the throne of Israel. Their second disagreement took place after Saul retained the war booty of the defeated Amalekites, Israel's traditional enemy, and spared the life of their king, Agag. Samuel publicly pronounced Saul's deposition from the throne. Saul fell into a state of melancholia that developed into an emotional disorder.
Saul's fits of depression and his moody, suspicious temperament caused him to attack the lad David, who had been brought into his household to soothe him by playing music. Jealous of David, Saul persecuted him, attacked him, sent him on perilous expeditions, and finally made him into an outlaw.
The Philistines then renewed their attack on Israel. Without David's support and depressed by the feeling that God had deserted him, Saul consulted a witch of Endor, seeking to recall the spirit of the dead Samuel. He was reproached and advised of his impending doom. In a battle against the Philistines Saul fought valiantly but vainly. His forces routed and his three sons slain, Saul died by his own hand. The tragic tale is told by David in an exquisite elegy lamenting the death of Saul and Jonathan. It is one of the most beautiful poems in the Bible.
The affection in which Saul was held is reflected in the action of the men of Yabesh-gilead, whose city he had saved in his first act as monarch. They risked their lives to rescue his body from the Philistines and gave it an honorable burial.
Further Reading
Although there is no single authoritative biography of Saul, there are numerous volumes of fiction, making it difficult to distinguish between historical and legendary accounts. An excellent short essay on him is in Rudolph Kittel, Great Men and Movements in Israel (trans. 1929). For historical background the following works are recommended: William Foxwell Albright, From the Stone Age to Christianity (1940; 2d ed. with new introduction, 1957); Max I. Magolis and Alexander Marx, A History of the Jewish People (1944); Salo Wittmayer Baron, A Social and Religious History of the Jews, vol. 1 (2d ed. 1952; 2d rev. ed. 1969); and Martin Noth, The History of Israel (trans. 1958; 2d ed. 1960).
| Encyclopedia of Judaism: Saul |
The rift with Samuel and his own apparently melancholy nature gave rise to fits of depression (I Sam. 14-23), alleviated only by music. Against this background, David had been summoned to play the harp for him. However, David's growing popularity, culminating in his victory over the Philistine champion Goliath in the Valley of Elah (I Sam. 17), and coupled with his marriage to Saul's daughter Michal and his friendship with the his son Jonathan, exacerbated the king's suspicions and jealousy to the point of uncontrollable rage bordering on madness and forced David to flee. Saul's end came at Mt. Gilboa after a new Philistine invasion. There Saul and three of his sons, including Jonathan, were killed (I Sam. 31). Saul's decapitated body was displayed by the Philistines on the wall of Beth Shean until buried by the men of Jabesh-Gilead. Another son, Ishbosheth, was then crowned but was soon assassinated (II Sam. 4), thus paving the way for kingship of David in a united monarchy.
| Bible Guide: Saul |
1. The first king of Israel, son of Kish of the tribe of Benjamin. Handsome and tall (I Sam 9:2), he proved a charismatic leader (I Sam 11:7). The account of his election as king is presented in parallel narratives, which differ in their viewpoints, being either favorable or hostile to the monarchy. The background to his election was the military successes of the Philistines and the growth of unrest among the tribes of Benjamin and Ephraim. The pro-monarchic account of his election narrates how Samuel found Saul searching for his father's lost asses and anointed him privately in Ramah (I Sam 9:1-10:16). Interwoven with this narrative, and possibly a separate account, is the story of his victory over the Ammonites who had attacked the city of Jabesh Gilead (I Sam chap. 11). An anti-monarchic version of his selection (I Sam chap. 8; 10:17-27; chap. 12) tells of Samuel's opposition to the demand of the people for a king. However, he eventually relented and presided over Saul's formal election at Mizpah. Samuel's main argument against appointing a king (I Sam 8:6-8) was based on his interpretation of the people's demand as a rejection of the kingship of God. His solemn warning of the consequences of the behavior of the king (I Sam 8:11-18), became a famous denunciation of the institution of the monarchy.
Due to the varying accounts, it is difficult to reconstruct the sequence of events during Saul's reign. It seems that after a brief period of organization, Saul directed his attention towards the Philistines, who had overrun the southern tribes of Israel, destroyed Shiloh, and were so thoroughly the masters of Judah and the central hill country that they maintained an outpost in Benjamin (I Sam 13:3). Saul's son, Jonathan, slew the Philistine governor at Geba (I Sam chap. 13), and thus the signal was given for the uprising. The Philistines took up a position opposite Gibeah in the gorge of Michmash, and Jonathan, without the knowledge of his father scaled the cliff and slew 20 men of the Philistine outpost. The philistine armies were routed and driven back to Philistia (I Sam chaps. 13-14). Thus their control of the mountain area was broken, although they continued to threaten Israel throughout Saul's reign.
The expulsion of the Philistines marked the beginning of Saul's kingship. In his attempts to assert his authority over the Israelite population of the central mountain area and unite the tribes under his rule, he uprooted the foreign enclaves in his tribe's territory. In this context, he killed an unknown number of Gibeonites in violation of the treaty made in Joshua's day (Josh chap. 9). After Saul's death, to rectify this, the Gibeonites demanded the lives of seven of Saul's sons; David handed over five of Saul's grandsons and two sons who were hanged at Gibeon (II Sam 21:1-9). The Ammonites, Moabites, Edomites and Arameans were driven off from the country east of the Jordan (I Sam 14:47). In order to deliver Judah from the raids of the Amalekites, Saul undertook an expedition against them; his army captured Agag, their king, and Samuel personally slew him, rebuking Saul for initially sparing his life (I Sam chap. 15). The breach between Saul and Samuel, a result of Saul's apparent usurpation of authority during the war against Amalek, was to cast a gloom on the remainder of the monarch's reign. An evil spirit seemed to posses the king; he was given to fits of terror and suspicious brooding; a profound melancholy crept over him, and only the sound of music gave him temporary relief. Perhaps it is in this context that David, a skilled musician, joined Saul's entourage; the narrative contrasts David's heroic personality, charm and popularity with the increasing nervous depression of Saul (I Sam 16:14-23).
Apparently after David's victory over Goliath (I Sam chap. 17), Saul grew increasingly jealous of David's popularity, even casting a spear at him (I Sam 18:10-11; 19:9-10). Later, in a fit of anger, Saul threw his spear at his own son Jonathan, who had become David's close friend and admirer (I Sam 20:33). David was forced to flee from Saul's wrath to the border regions of Judah and later as far as Gath in Philistia. Saul's rage against David extended beyond pursuing him and his followers, to attacking the priesthood which he felt had been siding with David (I Sam 22:17-19). This widened the gulf which had come to separate him from many of his people.
The end of his reign came when he engaged in one last forlorn struggle with his earliest enemy. The Philistines had invaded Israelite territory and gathered forces at Shunem; Saul established his headquarters on the slope of Mount Giloba. Sad forebodings of his fate troubling him, he traveled to En Dor to consult a witch about the outcome of the battle (I Sam 28:7-8), since he could no longer use the official means of divination (I Sam 28:6). The result of the séance confirmed his worst fears and filled his soul with despair (I Sam 28:20ff). The Israelite army had no chariots and could not withstand the assault of the heavy Philistine weaponry. On Mount Gilboa, Saul and his three sons, including Jonathan, were killed. The biblical narrative describes how Saul, being seriously wounded, called upon his armor-bearer to "thrust me through", and when the young man refused, the king fell upon his sword and died (I Sam 31:4). (In a contrasting account, in II Samuel 1:6-10, a young Amalekite claimed that he had slain Saul). The Philistines next day found their enemy dead, and hung his decapitated body on the walls of their city Beth Shan (I Sam 31:8-10). The inhabitants of Jabesh, remembering how Saul had responded to their cry for help, removed his body during the night, and gave it an honorable burial in their own city, the site of his first victory. According to I Samuel 31:12 they burned the bodies of Saul and Jonathan to spare them from further Philistine indignities (but see I Chr 10:12).
The outcome of the battle meant a state of vassalage for Israel; the Philistines regained control of much of the country and kept it until well into David's reign. Saul left behind him a tribal alliance weakened and in disarray, and it was David who was to establish the national unity of the Israelite tribes.
Recent research suggests that the biblical narrative was heavily tilted in favor of the Davidic version of events and that Saul's wrath and rage may have been fictious and that the picture of Benjaminite history has been distorted.
2. Saul of Rehoboth-by-the River was the sixth king of Edom. His reign succeeded that of Samlah of Masrekah and was followed by that of Baal-Hanan the son of Aohbor "before any king reigned over the Children of Israel" (I Chr 1:43).
3. Saul of Tarsus "who also is called Paul" (Acts 13:9). See PAUL.
Concordance
SAUL 1:
I Sam 9:2-3, 5,7-8, 10, 15,17-19, 21-22,24-27; 10:11-12, 14-16, 21,26; 11:4-7, 11-13, 15; 13:1-4,7, 9-11, 13,15-16, 22; 14:1-2, 16-21,24, 33-38, 40-47, 49-52; 15:1, 4-7, 9,11-13, 15-16,20, 24, 26-27,31, 34-35; 16:1-2, 14-15,17, 19-23; 17:2, 8, 11-15,19, 31-34, 37-39, 55, 57-58; 18:1-2, 5-13,15, 17-25, 27-30; 19:1-2, 4,6-7, 9-11, 14-15, 17-21, 24; 20:25-28, 30,32-33; 21:7,10-11; 22:6-7,9, 12-13, 21-22; 23:7-17,19, 21, 24-28; 24:1-5, 7-9,16, 22; 25:44; 26:1-7, 12, 17,21, 25; 27:1,4; 28:3-10, 12-15, 20-21, 25; 29:3, 5; 31:2-8, 11-12. II Sam 1:1-2,4-6, 12, 17,21-24; 2:4-5,7-8, 10, 12,15; 3:1, 6-8,10, 13-14; 4:1-2, 4, 8, 10; 5:2; 6:16, 20,23; 7:15; 9:1-3, 6-7, 9; 12:7; 16:5, 8; 19:17,24; 21:1-2, 4,6-8, 11-14; 22:1. I Chr 5:10; 8:33; 9:39; 10:2-8,11-13; 11:2; 12:1-2, 19, 23,29; 13:3; 15:29; 26:28. Is 10:29. Acts 13:21
SAUL 2:
Gen 36:37-38. I Chr 1:48-49
SAUL 3:
Acts 7:58; 8:1,3; 9:1, 4, 8,11, 17, 19, 22,24, 26; 11:25,30; 12:25; 13:1-2, 7, 9; 22:7, 13; 26:14
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Saul |
| Bible Dictionary: Saul |
The first king of Israel, who battled repeatedly with the Philistines. He often felt great despair, which was soothed by David playing his harp. Saul later became jealous of David and tried to have him killed in battle. After a prophesied defeat by the Philistines, Saul killed himself.
| Wikipedia: Saul |
| King Saul | |
|---|---|
| King of Israel | |
| David Plays the Harp for Saul, by Rembrandt van Rijn, c. 1658. | |
| Reign | c.1047 BC to 1007 BC |
| Coronation | at Gilgal |
| Born | 1079 B.C. |
| Birthplace | possibly Gibeah |
| Died | c.1007 BC |
| Place of death | Battle of Mount Gilboa |
| Successor | Ish-boseth |
| Consort | Ahinoam, daughter of Ahimaaz |
| Father | Kish according to theTanakh of the family of the Matrites, and a member of the tribe of Benjamin, one of the twelve Tribes of Israel. |
Saul (שאול המלך) (or Sha'ul, also Saul ben Kish) (Arabic: طالوت ,Tālūt) (Hebrew: שָׁאוּל, Modern Šaʾul Tiberian Šāʾûl ; "asked for" or "borrowed") (1079 - 1007 BC) was the first king of the united Kingdom of Israel (reigned 1047 - 1007) according to the Hebrew Bible. He was anointed by the prophet Samuel and reigned from Gibeah. He committed suicide during a battle with the Philistines at Mount Gilboa, during which three of his sons were also killed. The succession to his throne was contested by his only surviving son Ish-bosheth and David, who eventually prevailed.
The main account of Saul's life and reign is found in the Book of Samuel.
Contents |
According to the Tanakh, Saul was the son of Kish, of the family of the he was very old to at the time. Matrites, and a member of the tribe of Benjamin, one of the twelve Tribes of Israel. (1 Samuel 9:1-2; 10:21; 14:51; Acts 13:21) It appears that he came from Gibeah.
Saul married Ahinoam, daughter of Ahimaaz. They had four sons and two daughters. The sons were Jonathan, Abinadab, Malchishua and Ish-bosheth. Their daughters were named Merab and Michal.[1]
Saul also had a concubine named Rizpah, daughter of Aiah, who bore him two sons, Armoni and Mephibosheth. (2 Samuel 21:8)
Saul offered Merab to David as wife after his victory over Goliath, but David does not seem to have been interested in the arrangement. (1 Samuel 18:17-19) Saul then gave his other daughter Michal in marriage to David, (1 Samuel 18:20-27) but when David became Saul's rival to the kingship, Saul gave Michal in marriage to Palti, son of Laish. (1 Samuel 25:44)
Saul killed himself at the Battle of Mount Gilboa (1 Samuel 31:3-6; 1 Chronicles 10:3-6), and was buried in Zelah, in the region of Benjamin in modern-day Israel. (2 Samuel 21:14)
Three of Saul's sons – Jonathan, and Abinadab, and Malchishua – died with him at Mount Gilboa (1 Samuel 31:2; 1 Chronicles 10:2). Ish-bosheth became king of Israel, at the age of forty. (2 Samuel 2:10) Michal was returned as wife to David.
Ish-bosheth reigned for two years and was killed by two of his own captains. (2 Samuel 4:5) Armoni and Mephibosheth (Saul's sons with his concubine, Rizpah) were given by David along with the five sons of Merab (Saul's daughter)[2] to the Gibeonites, who killed them. (2 Samuel 21:8-9) Michal was childless. (2 Samuel 6:23)
The only male descendant of Saul to survive was Mephibosheth, Jonathan's son, (2 Samuel 4:4) who had been five when his father and grandfather Saul had died in battle. In time, he came under the protection of David. (2 Samuel 9:7-13) Mephibosheth had a young son, Micah, (2 Samuel 9:12) of whom nothing more heard.
Samuel, the Judge, had sons who were dishonest and not trustworthy of the faith. The leaders of the Israelites feared that it would be disastrous if his sons were to be judge over them and requested that Samuel give them a king. God warns that if he appoints a king over them, they will suffer the dealings of the king. Saul (Talut), a young Israelite, was commanded by his father, Kish, to go and locate their lost donkeys. Saul obeys and Samuel sees him walking toward him. God reveals to Samuel that Saul will be the one to be anointed as the "first" King of Israel. Peter J. Leithart observes:
In the Books of Samuel, Saul is not referred to as a king (melech), but rather as a “leader” or “commander” (nagid) (1 Samuel 9:16; 1 Samuel 10:1).[4] However (possibly representing an opposing literary strain[citation needed]), Saul is said to be made a "king" (melech) at Gilgal (1 Samuel 11:15). Even David, before he was anointed king, was referred to only as a future nagid, or military commander (1 Samuel 13:14).
The people generally used the term “king,” because their desire was to be like the other nations (1 Samuel 8:5; 10:19). This may be indicative of the difference between what a certain faction of the people wanted, and a definite reluctance of certain leaders (e.g., the prophet Samuel) to break from the old tribal order: viz., an attempt to satisfy everyone without creating a riot. But Saul was finally crowned as "king" (melech) in Gilgal. (1 Samuel 11:14-12:2)
The Books of Samuel give three events in Saul's rise to the throne:
According to 1 Samuel 10:8, Samuel had told Saul to wait for seven days after which they would meet; Samuel giving Saul further instructions. But as Samuel did not arrive after 7 days (1 Samuel 13:8) and the Israelites restless, Saul started preparing for battle by offering sacrifices. Samuel arrived just as Saul finished offering his sacrifices and reprimanded Saul for not obeying his instructions. As a result of not keeping God's instructions, God took away Saul's kingship (1 Samuel 13:14).
After the battle with the Philistines was over, the text describes Samuel as having instructed Saul to kill all the Amalekites, which was in accordance with the mitzvah to do so. Having forewarned the Kenites who were living among the Amalekites to leave, Saul went to war and defeated the Amalekites. Saul killed all the babies, women, children, poor quality livestock and men, and left alive the king and best livestock.
When Samuel found out that Saul had not killed them all, he became angry and launched into a long and bitter diatribe about how God regretted making Saul king, because Saul was disobedient. When Samuel turned away, Saul grabbed Samuel by his clothes and tore a small piece off them, which Samuel states is a prophecy about what will happen to Saul's kingdom. Samuel then commands that the Amalekite king (who, like all other Amalekite kings in the Hebrew Bible, is named Agag) should be brought forth. Samuel proceeds to kill the Amalekite himself and makes a final departure.
It is at this point that David, a son of Jesse, from the tribe of Judah, enters the story. According to the narrative:
In the text, Saul's son, Jonathan, and David become close friends and eventually David becomes Jonathan's brother-in-law by Michal. Jonathan recognises David as the rightful king, and 1 Samuel 18 states "Jonathan made a covenant with David, because he loved him as his own soul."[5] Jonathan even gives David his military clothes, symbolizing David's position as successor to Saul.
God makes David successful wherever Saul sends him. Therefore Saul sets David in charge of the army. After David returns from battle, the women heap praise upon him and refer to him as a greater military hero than Saul, driving Saul to jealousy, fearing that David constituted a rival to the throne.
Another day, while David is playing the harp, Saul, possessed by an evil spirit, throws a spear at him but misses on two occasions. Saul resolves to remove David from the court and appoints him an officer, but David becomes increasingly successful, making Saul more resentful of him. In return for being his champion, Saul offers to marry his daughter, Merob, to David, but David turns the offer down claiming to be too humble, and Merob is married to another man instead. Another daughter, Michal, falls in love with David, so Saul repeats the offer to David with Michal, but again David turns it down claiming to be too poor; Saul persuades David that the bride price would only be 100 foreskins from the Philistines, hoping that David would be killed trying to achieve this. David obtains 200 foreskins and is consequently married to Michal.
The narrative continues as Saul plots against David, but Jonathan dissuades Saul from this course of action, and tells David of it. Saul then tries to have David killed during the night, but Michal helps him escape and tricks his pursuers by using a household idol to make it seem that David is still in bed. David flees to Jonathan, who wasn't living near Saul. Jonathan agrees to return to Saul and discover his ultimate intent. While dining with Saul, Jonathan pretends that David has been called away to his brothers, but Saul sees through this and castigates Jonathan for being the companion of David, and it becomes clear that Saul wants David dead. The next day, Jonathan meets with David and tells him Saul's intent, and the two friends say their goodbyes, as David flees into the country. Saul later marries Michal to another man instead of David.
Saul is later informed by his head shepherd, an Edomite named Doeg, that Ahimelech assisted David. A henchman is sought to kill Ahimelech and the other priests of Nob. None of Saul's henchmen are willing to do this, so Doeg offers to do it instead, killing 85 priests. Saul also kills every man, woman and child living in Nob.
David had already left Nob by this point and had amassed about 400 disaffected men including a group of outlaws. With these men David launches an attack on the Philistines at Keilahhe. Saul realises he could trap David and his men inside the city and besiege it. However, David hears about this, and having received divine counsel (via the Ephod), finds that the citizens of Keilah would betray him to Saul. He decides to leave and flees to Ziph. Saul discovers this and pursues David on two occasions:
The phrase Saul is among the prophets, is mentioned by the text in a way that suggests it was a proverb in later Israelite culture. Two accounts of its origin are given:
Despite the oath(s) of reconciliation, the biblical text states that David felt insecure, and so made an alliance with the Philistines, becoming their vassal. Emboldened by this, the Philistines prepared to attack Israel, and Saul led out his army to face them at Mount Gilboa, but before the battle decided to secretly consult the witch of Endor for advice. The witch, unaware of who he is, reminds Saul that the king (i.e. Saul himself) had made witchery a capital offence, but after being assured that Saul wouldn't harm her, the witch conjures up the ghost of Samuel. Samuel's ghost tells Saul that he would lose the battle and his life.
Broken in spirit, Saul returns to face the enemy, and the Israelites are duly defeated. To escape the ignominy of capture, Saul asks his armour bearer to kill him, but is forced to commit suicide by falling on his sword when the armour bearer refuses. An Amalekite then claims to have killed Saul, and the Amalekite tells David. Infuriated, David orders the Amalekite to be put to death as punishment for killing the God's anointed, despite Saul's earlier assassination attempt against him. The body of Saul, with those of his sons, were fastened to the wall of Beth-shan, and his armor was hung up in the house of Ashtaroth (an Ascalonian temple of the Canaanites). The inhabitants of Jabesh-gilead (the scene of Saul's first victory) rescue the bodies and take them to Jabesh-gilead, where they burn their flesh and bury the bones (Sam.I 31,13).
Two opposing views of Saul are found in classical rabbinical literature. One is based on the reverse logic that punishment is a proof of guilt, and therefore seeks to rob Saul of any halo which might surround him; typically this view is similar to the republican source. The passage referring to Saul as a choice young man, and goodly (1 Samuel 9:2) is in this view interpreted as meaning that Saul was not good in every respect, but goodly only with respect to his personal appearance (Num. Rashi 9:28). According to this view, Saul is only a weak branch (Gen. Rashi 25:3), owing his kingship not to his own merits, but rather to his grandfather, who had been accustomed to light the streets for those who went to the bet ha-midrash, and had received as his reward the promise that one of his grandsons should sit upon the throne (Lev. Rashi 9:2).
The second view of Saul makes him appear in the most favourable light as man, as hero, and as king. This view is similar to that of the monarchical source. In this view it was on account of his modesty that he did not reveal the fact that he had been anointed king (1 Samuel 10:16; Meg. 13b); and he was extraordinarily upright as well as perfectly just. Nor was there any one more pious than he (M. Q. 16b; Ex. Rashi 30:12); for when he ascended the throne he was as pure as a child, and had never committed sin (Yoma 22b). He was marvelously handsome; and the maidens who told him concerning Samuel (cf 1 Samuel 9:11-13) talked so long with him that they might observe his beauty the more (Ber. 48b). In war he was able to march 120 miles without rest. When he received the command to smite Amalek (1 Samuel 15:3), Saul said: For one found slain the Torah requires a sin offering [Deuteronomy 21:1-9]; and here so many shall be slain. If the old have sinned, why should the young suffer; and if men have been guilty, why should the cattle be destroyed? It was this mildness that cost him his crown (Yoma 22b; Num. Rashi 1:10) —the fact that he was merciful even to his enemies, being indulgent to rebels themselves, and frequently waiving the homage due to him. But if his mercy toward a foe was a sin, it was his only one; and it was his misfortune that it was reckoned against him, while David, although he had committed much iniquity, was so favored that it was not remembered to his injury (Yoma 22b; M. Q. 16b, and Rashi ad loc.). In many other respects Saul was far superior to David, e.g., in having only one concubine, while David had many. Saul expended his own substance for the war, and although he knew that he and his sons would fall in battle, he nevertheless went boldly forward, while David heeded the wish of his soldiers not to go to war in person (2 Samuel 21:17; Lev. Rashi 26:7; Yalq., Sam. 138).
According to the Rabbis, Saul ate his food with due regard for the rules of ceremonial purity prescribed for the sacrifice (Yalq., l.c.), and taught the people how they should slay cattle (cf 1 Samuel 14:34). As a reward for this, God himself gave Saul a sword on the day of battle, since no other sword suitable for him was found (ibid 13:22). Saul's attitude toward David finds its excuse in the fact that his courtiers were all tale-bearers, and slandered David to him (Deut. Rashi 5:10); and in like manner he was incited by Doeg against the priests of Nob (1 Samuel 22:16-19; Yalq., Sam. 131) - this act was forgiven him, however, and a heavenly voice (bat qol) was heard, proclaiming: Saul is the chosen one of God (Ber. 12b). His anger at the Gibeonites (2 Samuel 21:2) was not personal hatred, but was induced by zeal for the welfare of Israel (Num. Rashi 8:4). The fact that he made his daughter remarry (1 Samuel 25:44), finds its explanation in his (Saul's) view that her betrothal to David had been gained by false pretenses, and was therefore invalid (Sanhedrin 19b). During the lifetime of Saul there was no idolatry in Israel. The famine in the reign of David (cf 2 Samuel 21:1) was to punish the people, because they had not accorded Saul the proper honours at his burial (Num. Rashi 8:4). In Sheol, Saul dwells with Samuel, which is a proof that all has been forgiven him ('Er. 53ba]
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Saul of the United Kingdom of Israel & Judah
House of Saul
Cadet branch of the Tribe of Benjamin
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| Regnal titles | ||
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| New title Anointed king to
replace Judge Samuel |
King of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah 1047 BC – 1007 BC |
Succeeded by Ish-bosheth, David |
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This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia article "Saul" by Joseph Jacobs, Ira Maurice Price, Isidore Singer, and Jacob Zallel Lauterbach, a publication now in the public domain.
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