Abstract
Recent research demonstrates that maternal grief functions paradigmatically to epitomize despair and sorrow in the Hebrew Bible. These literary uses of maternal grief reinforce the stereotype of womanhood, defined by devotion to children and anguish at their loss. In 1–2 Kings, narratives about unnamed bereaved mothers are used politically to create a contrast with named biblical queens who lose their sons but never grieve for them. Although 1–2 Kings names the queen mothers alongside the male rulers, these mothers have no agency or when they do, they act more like men than women. Neo-Assyrian inscriptions attest the masculinity of royal female power, and this article argues that conceptions of royal female power in Judah were similar. By contrasting the masculine queens with stereotyped “real men” and “real women,” traditional gender performances literarily overcome the institution of queenship. While the queens are polemicized, unnamed mothers emerge as the female heroes of Kings. Royal female power is demoted beneath reproductive ability and emotional responses to children, while the gender fluidity of royal power is circumscribed.
Despite its masculine title, 1–2 Kings displays a surprising amount of interest in bereaved mothers. Five narratives about unnamed bereaved mothers seeking help, restitution, or justice for their dead child are found therein (1 Kgs 3:16–28; 14:1–18; 17:17–24; 2 Kgs 4:8–37; 6:24–32). To these we can add 2 Kgs 4:1–7, which has a mother’s concern for the life of her children as its central theme. [1] These narratives all involve women in the tenth–ninth centuries BCE and, with the exception of Jeroboam’s wife (1 Kgs 14:1–18), none of the women are royal. Similarly, yet contrastingly, the only four royal women to receive extended mention in Kings also lived in the tenth–ninth centuries BCE and three are bereaved of their sons. [2] Yet, the texts – and modern commentators – do not dwell on their losses. The royal women receive no sympathy when their husbands and sons die, and the royal bereaved mothers are all portrayed negatively. The non-royal women, on the other hand, are portrayed either positively and able to save their children (1 Kgs 17:9; 2 Kgs 4:1–7; 4:8–37) or less negatively than one might expect given their questionable actions (1 Kgs 3:16–28; 2 Kgs 6:24–32). Finally, after Athaliah’s death (2 Kgs 11), women vanish from the narratives and only Huldah the prophetess appears in the late seventh century (2 Kgs 22). Politics are evidently at play in the dialectic surrounding queens and mothers.
Kozlova has recently demonstrated that maternal grief was an archetype of mourning in ancient Israel, known to be so powerful that it could be applied paradigmatically to a variety of situations in the Hebrew Bible. [3] Although biblical mourning has attracted significant attention in recent years, few studies pause to consider the absence of expected grief and mourning. [4] One would expect that the queen mother was symbolically the mother par excellence in the kingdom – the woman whose son reached the highest of heights. [5] Indeed, the name of these mothers has been preserved throughout millennia in 1–2 Kings, yet they do not conform to readers’ expectations of mothers. They rarely have agency as characters and when they do, they have no maternal role. The queens do not respond emotionally when their children die – in contrast to the unnamed women who do – and they thus appear distant, uncaring, unfemale, and unnatural. Their responses are those expected of men, not mothers. [6] Masculine women are not permitted in the literary world of Kings, however, and so the biblical narratives conspire to replace them with “real men.” Asa, Jehu, and Jehoiada, respectively, demonstrate what good men should do – limit female power and uphold gender boundaries. The extent to which this performance of masculinity is intertwined with faith in Yhwh makes for uncomfortable reading for feminist interpreters. While the men realign power with “true” masculinity, the emphasis on motherhood reassigns female power to the sphere of reproduction and childcare. All the passages about bereaved mothers come before Jezebel and Athaliah’s reigns and cultivate expectations of how women – that is, mothers – should behave. Needless to say, Jezebel and Athaliah do not match these expectations. Their masculine performances of power at the point of their children’s death create discord; the gender role being performed does not match the gender role that ought to be performed at such a crucial moment.
In Section 1, I analyse specific passages about non-royal, (non)bereaved mothers in 1–2 Kings, highlighting how the women’s desperation, distance from royalty, and seeking prophetic intervention result in positive portrayals and their children being saved. In Section 2, I discuss bereaved mothers and kings, demonstrating that when kings are involved the mothers are portrayed less positively, and the children die. Section 3 then turns to the portrayals of queens and queen mothers in 1–2 Kings, demonstrating how their lack of mourning and/or response to their child’s death conspires against them and underscores their masculinity. Finally, Section 4 notes the masculinity of queens in the Neo-Assyrian royal inscriptions, which was acceptable and praiseworthy, in contrast to 1–2 Kings where the royal women who act like men are portrayed as aberrative. [7] Ultimately, I argue that 1–2 Kings does not just critique specific Israelite and Judahite royal women but also critiques a political system that permitted (or admitted) the gender fluidity of royal female roles. Kings “corrects” this reality by elevating motherhood over queenship as the most important female role. In 1–2 Kings, good mothers save their sons while bad queens doom the nations. [8]
1 Non-royal, (non)bereaved mothers in Kings
1 Kings 17:8–24 and 2 Kings 4:1–7 both feature unnamed women who are widows and mothers and face the loss of their children. [9] In 1 Kgs 17, Elijah is sent by Yhwh to Zarephath where a widow provides food to him with the last of her stock and it miraculously multiplies. [10] Her son then falls ill and dies, and Elijah performs a miracle of resuscitation. [11] This woman’s son is threatened twice, first by starvation (17:12) and then by illness (17:17); both times Yhwh saves him. 2 Kings 4:1–7, meanwhile, tells the story of a widow of a member of the company of prophets whose children are about to be taken into slavery as payment for debt. [12] Elisha performs a miracle of multiplication and the children collect the oil for her to sell to pay her debts. [13] The passage shows the familial side of prophecy, where the women and children who usually remain hidden in the background of confrontations between prophets and kings now come to the fore. [14] In both passages, widowhood is central; both women lack men to provide for them and their children, so they turn to the prophets. They do not have the power to change their own situations but their determination and faith result in their children being saved.
To these we can add the story of the great woman of Shunem (2 Kgs 4:8–37), who is a very different character. [15] Her husband remains alive throughout and she is wealthy, providing for Elisha out of surplus rather than her last crumbs. She does not begin the narrative with a son but gains one halfway through, whether she wanted him or not (4:14–17). [16] Her unsought son dies abruptly (4:18–20) and the woman makes great haste to travel to Elisha and demand that he resuscitates him, which he does (4:21–37). This tale has many similarities to 1 Kgs 17: both feature a mother who houses a prophet, loses a son, turns to that prophet in desperation, and are rewarded with their sons’ lives. Neither woman prays to Yhwh themselves nor approaches the prophets with respect; the widow of Zarephath accuses Elijah of causing the death of her son (1 Kgs 17:18), and the woman of Shunem seizes Elisha’s feet (or genitals?) and refuses to leave without him (2 Kgs 4:27–30). [17] Their desperation is rewarded with life and commentators praise the woman of Shunem, in particular, for her initiative and determination. Thus, for example, Parker states that the woman of Shunem “acts with astonishing authority as she commands, argues, dismisses, and prevails over male characters.” [18] Long observes that “the Shunammite is clearheaded and purposeful in her urgent concentration.” [19] Cohn notes that she “takes matters into her own hands,” “the initiative is all hers,” and “her husband” is defined in relation to her. [20] Readers’ responses to the woman of Shunem are interesting, because the traits that result in her praise often become a point of critique when applied to a queen. [21] It is also notable that the only mention of royalty in these narratives is rejected, when the woman of Shunem turns down Elisha’s offer to speak to the king on her behalf (2 Kgs 4:13). So why are these stories preserved in 1–2 Kings? The usual answer is that they demonstrate the power of the prophets at the expense of the kings. [22] In other words, the stories about women were preserved because they were really about men. I suggest, however, that these narratives have additional rhetorical potential when the unnamed women are compared with the infamous queens. For if these stories make statements about the kings without directly mentioning them, it should not be surprising that they also make statements about the queens.
2 Bereaved mothers and kings
The first mention of children and kings in 1–2 Kings immediately introduces the theme of maternal grief. In 1 Kgs 3:16–28, two prostitutes come before king Solomon, one of whom claims that the other accidentally killed her son and switched his body with her living son while she slept (3:16–22). [23] The statement that the women were prostitutes highlights their lack of kinship and legal support and emphasizes the social difference between them and the king. [24] It also explains why two women were living together with their children but no men. [25] The lack of evidence puts the king in a difficult position but Solomon “solves” the case by suggesting that the remaining child should be killed, leading one woman to give up her claim to him. Provan states that “the identity of the true mother, the one who gives up her child out of love is thus revealed to Solomon.” [26] Notably, however, this woman may not be the biological mother of the child. 1 Kings 3:26 says that she was the “one whose son was alive,” but this is only indicated by her response to Solomon’s proposal; if it was evident whose son was alive in the first place, there would be no case to answer. Due to the lack of differentiation between the two women, this “true mother” could well be the one who killed the first child but was simply first (or loudest) to protest Solomon’s idea. [27] Regardless, Solomon’s view – and thus the reader’s – is that this woman deserves to be given the child because of her emotional response to the threat of his death. [28] A few things should be emphasized here: first, the king’s response to a dead child and two desperate mothers is to get a sword and endanger another child. [29] Second, true mothers – and perhaps, good women – are indicated by their attachment to their children and their behaviour when they die or are threatened. Through their responses, the women judge themselves in the eyes of the reader. [30]
We now turn to the wife of Jeroboam I (1 Kgs 14:1–18), who bears the distinction of being the only royal woman given a narrative but not a name or speech in 1–2 Kings. [31] Although often referred to as “wife of Jeroboam,” the narrative centres around her motherhood and her attempt to determine the fate of her sick son, Abijah. Jeroboam tells her to disguise herself and travel to the prophet Ahijah (14:1–3). She does so, and Ahijah informs her that her son will die when she enters Tirzah (14:12–13), all descendents will be cut off from the house of Jeroboam (14:10–12), and his kingship will be replaced by another (14:14). The passage is full of irony: the woman disguises herself to go to a blind prophet (14:4), [32] the king being raised up by Yhwh against Jeroboam (14:14) parallels Jeroboam raising up his hand against Rehoboam (; 1 Kgs 11:26), [33] and, in contrast to the Davidic line, the Israelite royal line appears doomed at its inception. [34] Differently, Branch reads the narrative in light of spousal abuse, noting the negative implications of the woman’s passivity, silence, and obedience for her relationship with Jeroboam. [35]
Although the lack of name and speech may imply the subjugation of the wife of Jeroboam, it may also reflect authorial ambivalence. Notably, this woman’s status and anonymity permit comparison with two other mothers in 1–2 Kings. First, the only other northern queen mentioned is the infamous Jezebel who is violently opposed to Yhwh’s prophets, loses both her sons in ignominious circumstances, and her husband’s house is ended violently. Second, the woman of Shunem is of high status, unnamed, and loses her son but turns to a Yahwistic prophet to save him. The wife of Jeroboam has clear parallels with both: like Jezebel, she is a queen and her husband’s house will end in violence, but like the woman of Shunem, she has no name and consults a Yahwistic prophet when her son falls sick. Her passivity, meanwhile, offers a point of comparison to Jezebel. While Jezebel is destructively dominant, Jeroboam’s wife is passive and obedient. Although her silence could be a sign of subjugation, it may also serve to emphasize that this queen was not like Jezebel. Indeed, in consulting a Yahwistic prophet she models good behaviour, but ultimately her association with Jeroboam cannot go unpunished.
We should also note the mourning and burial for Abijah (14:13, 18), which is usually glossed over by readers. In 1 Kgs 14:13 Ahijah says, “All Israel shall mourn for him (כל־ישׂראל וספדו־לו) and bury him; for he alone of Jeroboam shall come to the grave, because in him there is something pleasing to Yhwh, god of Israel, in the house of Jeroboam.” Amidst the pain of the maternal grief the prophecy augurs, it offers a note of comfort for the wife of Jeroboam and places Abijah in significant company. In 1–2 Kings, the only other person who is mourned is a man of god (1 Kgs 13:29–30a): “he laid the body in his own grave and they mourned for him” (וינח את־נבלתו בקברו ויספדו עליו). Furthermore, the only person all Israel mourns in Samuel-Kings is Samuel himself (כל־ישׂראל ויספדו־לו; 1 Sam 25:1; 28:3). David’s men also mourn and weep for Saul and Jonathan (ויספדו ויבכו; 2 Sam 1:12a). All of these occurrences of ספד involve public mourning of important individuals, and Abijah is the only royal in Kings to receive such honour; even David himself is not mourned (1 Kgs 2:10–11). [36] The theme of mourning in Samuel turns to formulaic death and burial notices and occasional prophetic statements in Kings. [37] As he was not a king, Abijah is not afforded the usual formulae but Ahijah’s words are notable nonetheless. The emphasis on Abijah alone coming to his grave indicates the severe judgement on the house of Jeroboam but also provides some comfort to his mother. She cannot save him, but her son’s correct burial and mourning rites would permit him an existence in the afterlife. It also offers a parallel to Josiah, who is told that disaster will come on Jerusalem but he himself would be “gathered to his grave in peace” (2 Kgs 22:15–20); judgement and comfort are intertwined in death for these two royal figures. Finally, the note that “in him there is something pleasing to Yhwh” is also a double-edged sword: it highlights Abijah’s goodness but also denotes the northern kingdom’s lost opportunity to found a righteous dynasty. [38] Abijah and his mother thus further illustrate the themes found in 1 Kgs 3; children connected with royalty portend grief and kings endanger rather than save children.
If in 1 Kgs 14 a small note of comfort is found in correct burial and mourning, all comfort is lost in the siege and starvation of 2 Kgs 6:24–32. The king of Israel is depicted walking on the wall and confronted by an unnamed woman. Initially, he says he cannot help but then permits her to speak (6:26–27). She informs him that she made a pact with another woman to cook and eat her son one day and the other woman’s son the next day, but the other woman reneged on the deal and hid her son. [39] When the king hears her words, he tears his clothes, showing sackcloth beneath (6:30) and vows to kill Elisha (6:31–32). As much as readers desire one, the story has no resolution. The king is powerless and Elisha either does not want to or cannot help. [40] It is unclear whether the mothers kill their children in order to eat them or whether they had died already, though Parker notes that the woman would have more motive to hide a living child than a corpse. [41] Cannibalism in times of desperation finds frequent expression in the Hebrew Bible, yet feminist scholars observe that the women of 2 Kgs 6 are criticized by numerous commentators. [42] Hens-Piazza notes a few of the adjectives used by commentators to describe the women as “abominable, callous, shameless, inhuman.” [43] Park states that the women are “condemned and dismissed, but rarely empathized with”; they are viewed as monsters, not mothers. [44] Lanner, meanwhile, questions Lasine’s “comic” reading and critiques Reinhartz’s claim that this is cannibalism of the “worst sort” – a statement that implicitly places more blame on mothers than fathers. [45] As these scholars observe, focusing only on the “moral depravity” of the women’s actions risks making them the villains, not the victims. [46] Yet, these mothers are victims, suffering the consequences of the decisions of men and a male god.
The three narratives considered here all feature unnamed mothers, threatened sons, and kings. In Section 1, where royalty is absent, the children survive thanks to the prophets. Here, however, the damage is done by the institution of kingship – Solomon is wise but not a miracle-worker, Jeroboam’s family suffers for the sins of the father, and the king of Israel is powerless in his capital city. On one level, the message is clear: kings endanger lives, prophets save them. In this sense, literary children are a useful illustrative tool, as their cultic-domestic value and their vulnerability increase their rhetorical potential. [47] Ancient Near Eastern royal inscriptions thus use violence against children in military conflicts as a means of demonstrating the power of the victors and the impotence of those defeated. [48] Violence against children is especially rhetorically impactful when establishing a deity’s power in relation to someone. [49] Here, the prophets’ ability to save children places them in closer relationship to Yhwh than the kings who cannot prevent violence against the children they encounter. The female characters also uphold this ideology. Mothers who consult the Yahwistic prophets see their children saved (1 Kgs 17; 2 Kgs 4:1–7; 4:8–37) or at least buried with dignity (1 Kgs 14:1–18), while those who go to the kings lose their sons (1 Kgs 3; 2 Kgs 6).
The mothers also uphold ideologies of male expectations of motherhood, demonstrating, in particular, devotion to children. [50] The women of Section 1 – the widow of Zarephath, the widow of 2 Kgs 4:1–7, and the woman of Shunem – are all praised by commentators for their determination and efforts to save their children. Any non-conforming behaviours displayed by these women are accepted because they result in the life of a child. Interestingly, no one praises the ingenuity of the woman who hid her child in 2 Kgs 6, nor the determination of Jeroboam’s wife to travel to Ahijah at Shiloh, despite the similarity with the woman of Shunem’s travel to Elisha. In reader responses, outcomes dictate reception of the means. Although their children do not survive, the biblical texts themselves do not condemn the mothers. In these cases, the women could not control the wider societal and cultural factors underlying their situations but respond to the threat to their children in the appropriate manner – devoted, desperate, grieving, and willing to go to great lengths to save them. Their actions may not merit praise, but they do not provoke condemnation from the biblical authors because they sought male guidance and fit male expectations of mothers. Through the paradigms of motherhood and maternal grief, the women become characterized and subject to the authorial agenda. The strategic use of these literary mothers becomes clear as we now turn to the depiction of the most important women in the monarchic history of Israel and Judah.
3 The non-maternal mothers of kings
1–2 Kings reports the names of the mothers of the kings throughout centuries of the Judahite monarchic rule, yet only four are given extended comments. [51] In contrast to mothers elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible, they show no desperation to conceive children and are not portrayed raising children, showing concern for their well-being, or grieving and mourning when they die. Most queen mothers are limited to a brief mention of their name, origins, and son; their motherhood is acknowledged but reported only via their son and they have no agency themselves. [52] In a few cases, the sins of the son are specifically related to the sins of the mother, but the righteousness of a son is never attributed to maternal (or female) influence. [53] In 1–2 Kings, a royal woman could lead a king down a dangerous path, but not a good one. [54] We now turn to the few royal women who are permitted narratives in Kings: Bathsheba, Maacah, Jezebel, and Athaliah. A huge amount of literature has been devoted to these women, so I will focus specifically on their portrayal as mothers.
In Samuel, Bathsheba is almost a non-person, a flat character subordinated to the emphasis on David. [55] When her first husband dies, she mourns appropriately (2 Sam 11:26–27) and when her son becomes ill and dies, we hear indirectly that “David comforted Bathsheba his wife” (2 Sam 12:24). Although Uriah and the newborn son died as a consequence of sin, mourning and grief restore right order and out of this parental grief Solomon is born, whom Yhwh loved (2 Sam 12:24). [56] In Kings, however, Bathsheba grows in status while David diminishes. [57] Her presence is preferred to Abishag, who was beautiful but not a mother and her status is demonstrated physically by Solomon bowing to her and seating her on a throne (כסא 1 Kgs 2:19). [58] Meanwhile, her political influence is signalled by Adonijah approaching her to gain the king’s ear (1 Kgs 2:13–18). Her communication of Adonijah’s request results – whether deliberately or not – in Adonijah’s death (1 Kgs 2:22–25). [59] Even though a son of David dies, Bathsheba is not condemned by the author, which contrasts with the reception of Jezebel and Athaliah’s violence. Whereas those queens are lambasted for their slaughter of prophets and Davidic princes, Bathsheba is not critiqued, perhaps because men mediate the violence. [60] Adonijah approaches Bathsheba of his own volition and Solomon alone decides his death based on her words; at no point does Bathsheba incite violence explicitly, unlike Jezebel and Athaliah. [61] She does not overstep the boundaries of her role as queen mother and is thus a useful authorial character, demonstrating how royal female power could work acceptably beneath the male authority. While she mourned for Uriah, she does not mourn for David, but accepts the redefinition of her role from wife to queen mother and focuses her energy on her son.
While Bathsheba’s actions are confined to her son and courtly politics, Maacah’s influence was multigenerational and her actions religious. 1 Kings 15:2 introduces her as the daughter of Abishalom and mother of Abijam, but 15:10 also records her as the (grand)mother of Asa. Apparently, she made an image for Asherah and, consequently, Asa deposed her from her position as גבירה (15:13). The fact that Maacah was deposed from being גבירה has resulted in some viewing the role of גבירה as an official office. [62] Yet, although גבירה is often translated “queen mother,” the occurrences of the term elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible demonstrate that its meaning is broader than this. [63] Translations of “lady” or “mistress” would be closer to the mark, but these usually carry strong connotations of femaleness. [64] As the root of גבירה is גבר, which signifies maleness, in particular, male strength, I wonder if something like “strong one” might be more accurate and offer more interpretive flexibility for conceptions of gender and power. [65] Ackerman suggests that the association of Maacah with Asherah and the term גבירה indicates that the Judahite queen mother’s role was connected to Asherah. [66] The text is coy about the location of Maacah’s image but the mention of Asa destroying it at the Wadi Kidron parallels Josiah’s reform of the Jerusalem temple (esp. 2 Kgs 23:6). If it was in the temple, then Maacah is the only woman in Kings to make changes to the Jerusalem temple, which was a seemingly solely male prerogative (e.g., 2 Kgs 16:10–18; 23:4–7). The king’s reaction indicates that he had not given permission for her activity and her demotion on account of cultic activity is unparalleled in 1–2 Kings. When other reforming kings overhauled the temple, they did not depose individuals, which suggests that the real problem may have been Maacah’s transgression of royal (female) boundaries, rather than the image itself. Maacah’s double attribution of motherhood (1 Kgs 15:2, 10) denotes her continuing status but also the loss of her husband and son. By reporting only her transgression and not her reaction to these personal losses, the reader has no chance to sympathize with Maacah. Her motherhood is important insofar as it legitimized male power but once her status threatened male authority, it was swiftly removed.
In the passages pertaining to Jezebel (1 Kgs 16, 18, 19, 21; 2 Kgs 9), the ongoing dialectic between female power and masculinity becomes explicit. [67] Her status – both hereditary and via her marriage alliance – is paralleled (and superseded) only by Athaliah in Judah. [68] Lipka lists her masculine qualities as strength, leadership ability, having agency, violence, and preference for male company. [69] She is credited with (negatively) influencing her husband’s and son’s rule of Israel (1 Kgs 16:31–32; 22:51–53), interfering in prophetic circles (1 Kgs 18:4, 13, 19), and inciting the elders to abuse their position and murder an innocent man (1 Kgs 21:1–16). Although she is often assumed to be all-dominant until her death, her influence seems to wane during her son Jehoram’s rule. He explicitly was “not like his father and mother,” did not support Baal (2 Kgs 3:2), and Jezebel is not mentioned in narratives concerning him. [70] She only reappears as a symbol of Omride/Ahabite rule when Jehu consolidates his (Deuteronomistic) coup and begins his elimination of political rivals (2 Kgs 9:30–37). [71] Interestingly, Jezebel never mourns Ahab, despite their apparent closeness (1 Kgs 22:37–40), and she is absent from the bedside of her son Ahaziah when he was injured (2 Kgs 1:1–16). Messengers (1:2–8) and captains repeatedly attend their king (1:9–10, 11–12, 13–16), but his mother does not. [72] She is not said to seek divine or magical help to save him (cf. the woman of Shunem and Jeroboam’s wife). She is also distant from her other son Jehoram, and her reaction to Jehu approaching the gate of Jezreel – surely signalling Jehoram’s death (2 Kgs 9:30 cf. 9:17–22) – is not grief, shock, or penitence. She does not tear her clothes and put ashes and sackcloth on, as one might expect of a parent learning of a son’s death. [73] Quite the opposite – she paints her eyes, adorns herself, and challenges Jehu’s authority. [74] McKinlay notes that masculinities and femininities are intertwined in this image; while this woman was, indeed, a woman, she did not act like one and women in Israel who do not act like women must be punished. [75] In this performance of femininity and masculinity, Jezebel is a masculine woman, polemically portrayed as illegitimate in both genders. [76] She is not a man and, due to her masculinity and omission of her motherhood, she is not presented as a “true” woman. [77] Readers who identified with the pain and desperation of the non-royal bereaved mothers in 1–2 Kings find none of that in Jezebel’s response to her sons’ deaths. While images of Rachel “weeping for her children” and Rizpah standing vigil for her sons serve as paradigmatic images of maternal grief and devastation elsewhere, the image of Jezebel after her children’s deaths is completely different.
Athaliah also responds unexpectedly to her son’s death. Rather than mourning, tearing her clothes, weeping, fasting, or lamenting, when she sees that her son is dead, she arises to destroy all the royal seed of Judah (2 Kgs 11:1). [78] Readers of Kings rarely bat an eyelid when a man wipes out the “house” of an opponent in order to take the throne – which may well have included the deaths of children. [79] Athaliah’s violence, however, is portrayed in relation to her maternal bereavement, creating an implicit contrast with the behaviour of other bereaved mothers in Kings and the Hebrew Bible. [80] Athaliah is thus presented as an anti-mother, losing her own son and seeking to deprive others of theirs. [81] This may also have animalistic connotations, as the image of an aggressive she-bear robbed of her cubs was evidently proverbial in ancient Israel (2 Sam 17:8; Hos 13:8; Prov 17:12). In addition, she is framed against the backdrop of ideal motherhood and legitimate rulership. [82] If femininity is rooted in motherhood and masculinity in rulership, then Athaliah fails at both. Like Jezebel, she is replaced by an appropriately male king, who is surrounded only by men and represents the supreme masculine deity. [83] Yet, she is also replaced by an appropriately female woman. Macwilliam notes that Jehosheba’s “perfect femininity” is displayed in her prioritizing the safety of a male above her own, saving his wet nurse, and retiring appropriately from the foreground of events. [84] Athaliah’s performance of power thus results in her completely blurring the boundaries between genders. If Jezebel is portrayed as a masculine queen mother, Athaliah’s gender performance takes her beyond the authorial categories of male and female. [85] Rather than admit that the image of masculinity – the royal, victorious, strong Yahwistic king – was redefined as a female role, the authors of kings attempt to remove Athaliah completely. Even Jehu thought to bury Jezebel, but Athaliah is not given a burial notice – she is erased from the world in silence. [86]
4 Women and power: masculinity and motherhood
When the royal women’s narratives are considered purely in relation to each other, the lack of attention to details about their motherhood seems normative. It is only when we read the queens alongside the other women of Kings that the absence of motherhood and maternal grief becomes striking. I suggest that there are three explanations for this. First, the maturity rather than infancy of the kings naturally and politically lessens the emphasis on maternal nurture. Second, royal inscriptions/texts tend to emphasize male power/achievements and female influence (of all kinds) wanes in comparison. Third, I contend that the presence of unnamed mothers in Kings is evidence of narratological politics. These women offer subversive parallels to the royal women who make the masculinity of the royal women appear aberrative rather than normative. Good women in Kings are characterized as subordinate mothers, for whom children are more important than any form of power.
The Neo-Assyrian inscriptions offer support for the interpretation of royal female roles in light of masculinity. In these texts, the queen or queen mother was the female equivalent of the king. [87] Her administrative and economic importance is clear, and she is paralleled with the king in at least one sacrificial ritual. [88] Two votive texts of especially prominent queens, Libbali-šarrat and Naqi’a, both mention their “reign” (palû) alongside the palû of the king and Naqi’a had the distinction of images of her likeness being installed in temples. [89] There are also numerous examples of the queen/queen mother being addressed as “lord” (bēlu) as an honorific title. [90] From the reign of Sennacherib onwards, women were involved in military matters. [91] May observes that only one queen seems to be extolled for a “female quality,” namely, Tašmētu-šarrat, “the palace lady, my beloved spouse, whose form the goddess Bēlet-ilī made more perfect than (that of) all (other) women.” [92] Interestingly, the kings were praised for their beauty more than the queens and with similar expressions; femininity does not seem to have been textually important when writing about a queen. [93] Nor was fertility or childrearing textually important, though the symbol of the queens’ seal was the scorpion, which was probably connected to ideas about defending and raising children. [94] Royal women do not generally appear connected with children in texts and, although we might assume that fertility was a female concern, it is praised in royal males and not mentioned in regards to royal women. [95] The Neo-Assyrian inscriptions also do not depict the queen mothers mourning the dead kings, though SAA 20 34 offers an example of a ritual enacted for the burial of a queen, during which the other queens cry out “[C]ome, [bu]ry the queen, the daughter of righ[teousness].” [96] Most likely the authors of the Neo-Assyrian inscriptions, much like those of 1–2 Kings, did not wish to dwell on the deaths of the kings, which could create a politically unstable situation. Coronation rituals are more likely than mourning rituals to appear in inscriptions as crowning successors quickly would have discouraged usurpers and stressed the ongoing legitimacy and power of the office of kingship. [97] In the Neo-Assyrian inscriptions, therefore, masculine performances of power by royal women are well attested and even praiseworthy.
I contend, therefore, that Kings does not just seek to emphasize male royal power but seeks to redefine female royal power. Whereas the kings could be rhetorically measured against David (good) and Jeroboam (bad), the standards for queens are set by Jezebel and Athaliah (both bad). No queen is endorsed as a comparative model of correct female behaviour. [98] Rather, the rhetorical measure for queens seems to be motherhood – as the epitome of femininity and a signal of patriarchal subordination. [99] The institution of motherhood permits comparison and (compulsory) feminization of women regardless of status. [100] Thus, via their motherhood and grief at the threatened loss of their children, the narratives about the widow of Zarephath, the widow of 2 Kgs 4:1–7, and the great woman of Shunem conspire to make readers admire these women. Their role, devotion, and piety are divinely rewarded. The narratives about the mothers whose children die (1 Kgs 3; 14; 2 Kgs 6) also evoke sympathy from readers. The narratives about Maacah, Jezebel, and Athaliah, as non-maternal, non-grieving mothers, however, create discord with readers’ expectations of women and motherhood and inspire condemnation. As van Wolde observes, characters become what they are in relation to others. [101] The women of Kings are characterized in comparisons – pious feminine mothers and evil masculine queens.
5 Conclusions
This essay has argued that the authors of 1–2 Kings use the institution of motherhood and the paradigm of maternal grief to polemicize against the institution of queenship and the gender fluidity it threatened. While Neo-Assyrian inscriptions attest the masculinity of royal female roles and even praise their queens and queen mothers as men, 1–2 Kings vilifies masculine gender performances of its royal women. The absence of femininity of queens and queen mothers in Neo-Assyrian texts appears unimportant, but the presence of numerous narratives about unnamed bereaved mothers in 1–2 Kings makes the absence of femininity in royal female figures there appear negative. The unnamed bereaved mothers of 1–2 Kings are all located in tenth–ninth-century Israel and Judah and precede the accounts of Jezebel and Athaliah’s reigns, rendering their non-maternal portrayals and responses to their sons’ deaths especially discordant for readers’ expectations. The political use of maternal bereavement to enforce gender norms upholds scholarly observations of the importance of maternal grief in ancient Israel, as well as the literary uses of children in the Hebrew Bible. Furthermore, by aligning femininity with motherhood and masculinity with royal power, the authors present the queens as illegitimate in role and gender – Maacah, Jezebel, and Athaliah all seem more masculine than feminine and are all replaced by “real” men. The gender fluidity seen in the exercise or perception of power is thus authorially corrected and circumscribed; men are rulers, women are mothers. While male rulers could be compared to David or Jeroboam ben Nebat, royal women are compared to mothers or Jezebel/Athaliah. The triumph of motherhood as the measure of a woman has ultimately resulted in the queens and queen mothers – the most important women in Israel and Judah’s monarchies – being demoted beneath any woman in the Bible who matches male expectations of the female role. Gender fluidity is aggressively undermined but simultaneously associated with great power.
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