No, they split into the Northern Kingdom of Israel (ten tribes) under Jeroboam, and the Southern Kingdom of Judah.
After Solomon's death, the people approached his son Rehav'am (Rehoboam) and asked that he now lower the tax. He ignored the counsel of his elder advisers and refused the people's request. This led the Ten Tribes to turn away from him (1 Kings ch.12).
nope because after he died all the Israelites went to different tribes
According to traditional chronology, the united kingdom, from Saul to Solomon, was for about 85 years. After that, the kingdom split into Judah and Israel. The kingdom of Judah was for 374 years following the death of King Solomon. The kingdom of Israel (the Ten Tribes) was for 241 years following the death of King Solomon.
The twelve tribes of Israel lived in the united kingdom of Israel for centuries before it was a united kingdom. It became united under kings Saul, David and Solomon, but the Israelites had been there already for about 350 years, since the time of Joshua, during the era of the Judges.
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The Israelites originally settled the territory as separate tribes, each under the authority of local chieftains. These chieftains would identify their fellow clansmen by their ancestry (from which son of Jacob his lineage came). As the threat from the Philistines became more acute than the indigenous Canaanite threats, Israelites banded together and established a monarchy to rule over all of the tribes. This monarchy remained united under the reigns of Saul, David, and Solomon. Solomon's son (Rehoboam) was unable to keep the Kingdom united and it fractured into the Northern Kingdom (Israel) and the Southern Kingdom (Judah). After the fall of the Northern Kingdom to Assyria, the people begin to be called Judeans or Jews due to Judah being the only remaining Israelite Kingdom.
Solomon's son was Rehoboam. He succeeded Solomon as king of the United Monarchy of Israel but later faced rebellion, resulting in the kingdom being divided into the Kingdom of Israel and the Kingdom of Judah.
in 1973 United Kingdom joined the EU
Saul David and Solomon.
A:Although the Bible says that god granted Solomon great wisdom, it also says that Solomon's spent unwisely and and unwisely imposed swingeing taxes that caused great hardship among the Israelites. Whern his son, Rehoboam, refused to reduce those taxes, the Israelites broke away from the united Kingdom of Israel and formed their own Kingdom of Israel.
AnswerAccording to the Bible, Solomon had ruled the United Monarchy known as Israel so unwisely and imposed such swingeing taxes that the Israelites hoped for improvement under his son, Rehoboam. When Rehoboam vowed to continue to policies of his father, the Israelites rebelled and broke away to form a northern kingdom, which they called Israel. The much smaller southern kingdom of Rehoboam became known as Judah.According to the noted Israeli archaeologist, there never really was a United Monarchy - the two kingdoms were always separate, with their own customs, culture and separate dialects of the Hebrew language. Nothing important happened after the reign of Solomon, who is probably just a figure of legend.
King David united the Israelites into a single nation. He was the second king of the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah.
King Saul was anointed by the prophet Samuel, at God's instruction. Saul united the Israelites under his rule, thus forming the united kingdom of Israel.