Solomon

King Solomon ("Name means::peace"), (1036 BC-r.1015 BC-975 BC), was the fourth and last King of the United Kingdom of Israel, the son of King David and David's then-favorite wife Bath-sheba. He began to reign in the 477th year following Exodus of Israel. He was twenty-one years old when he began to reign, and he reigned over Israel for forty years.

Accession
Solomon's accession to the throne of Israel was difficult: he had to contend with a usurper. Toward the end of David's life and reign (he was seventy years old at the time and suffering from chronic hypothermia), Solomon's ambitious brother Adonijah asserted himself as king and even suborned a priest (Abiathar) to lend him legitimacy. Happily for Solomon, his mother Bath-sheba had enough wit to inform David of Adonijah's actions; in this, Nathan the prophet corroborated her account. David moved swiftly and, with the aid of the still-loyal priest Zadok I and another officer (Benaiah son of Jehoiada), had Solomon made king immediately, rather than waiting for David to die. Adonijah, seeing his plans come to nothing, ran immediately to the brazen altar and caught hold of its horns, thus claiming sanctuary. Solomon granted it and effectively placed Adonijah on probation.

Adonijah, however, broke the terms of that probation shortly after David died. In David's last year, a nurse known to Bible history as Abishag the Shulamite had been ministering to David by lying next to him in bed in order to transfer her body heat to his cold body, though David never actually had sexual relations with her. (This remains today a common emergency first-aid measure for hypothermia that affects a member of a hiking or mountaineering party.) Now Adonijah asked permission to marry Abishag. Solomon saw this as a direct threat to his throne and ordered his immediate execution. He followed this up with further death warrants against a general named Joab and a former rebel named Shimmei.

Solomon asks for wisdom
Solomon is most famous, and justly so, for asking God, not for riches or political power, but merely for the wisdom required to govern Israel. God granted him wisdom of a sort that would make him an international reputation, and also made him rich and powerful. Sadly, in his later years Solomon would squander these advantages. The Book of Proverbs probably dates from Solomon's early years, as does the Song of Solomon, still considered one of the best and most beautiful love poems ever written, and included in the canon as an indicator of the love of Jesus Christ for those He died to save.

Building of the Temple

 * Main Article: Solomon's Temple



Solomon's first great project was to build the first permanent Temple to God. The full description of the Temple, and the materials that went into its building, appears in and. Briefly, Solomon designed the Temple according to the plan of the original Tabernacle as described in the Book of Exodus. Into its perfect-cubical Holy of Holies Solomon had the Ark of the Covenant brought, and there it remained until the last days of the Southern Kingdom. He broke ground for the Temple in the fourth year of his reign (specifically in the 480th year since the Exodus of Israel) and took seven years to build it.

Foreign affairs under Solomon
Solomon began early by making a treaty with the then-reigning Pharaoh of Egypt, even to having the daughter of Pharaoh come to his palace, probably as a royal hostage. Solomon also made a treaty with Hiram, king of Tyre, for the delivery of the vast quantities of cedar timbers that went into the Temple construction. Under him, Israel was at the height of its power, with territorial holdings extending from the Euphrates River to the borders of Philistine country and of Egypt.

The most famous foreign dignitary that Solomon received was, of course, the Queen of Sheba:

The Undoing of Solomon
Solomon's failings began toward the middle of his reign. By his own estimate, he took seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines. These wives were from nations that God had instructed the Israelites not to intermarry with. The results were predictable: he began to partake of the pagan practices of these women. Among other things, he built several high places to accommodate their various versions of Baal and similar deities.

The results of that were the baleful prophecy that the kingdom would divide after his death. He would not live to see that, but neither could he change that.

Toward the end, Solomon realized what tremendous mistakes he had made. He poured out his repentance in the Book of Ecclesiastes.

Death and Succession
In the 507th year following the Exodus of Israel, Solomon died. His son Rehoboam reigned in his stead&mdash;but immediately the Kingdom of Israel, consisting of ten tribes under the command of Jeroboam I, split off from the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, which together continued as the Kingdom of Judah.

Solomon died shortly before the religious new year; otherwise the length of his reign would have been stated as forty-one years, not forty.

Chronological Placement

 * Main Article: Biblical chronology dispute

James Ussher reckoned the beginning of Solomon's reign at 1015 BC. Edwin R. Thiele reckoned it at 970 BC. The forty-five-year discrepancy results from an interpretation of a major event in the history of Israel that happened long after Solomon's death. The dates of birth, reign, and death given at the top of his article come from Ussher.