Q. What is known about the succession rules in Israelite kingship and the surrounding area? Was it a simple agnatic primogeniture, or was it more complicated than that? Also, how did the status of the mother affect succession?
A. Kingship/Succession
The succession rules of kingship varied throughout the ancient Near East. Normally kingship was dynastic and hereditary in principle, though not necessarily through simple agnatic primogeniture—passing from the king to a son (preferably the first-born) or other male relative.
Kingship in ancient Israel was not originally hereditary. The Hebrew Bible records three varied accounts of how Saul was appointed as the first king of Israel. In
God eventually rejects Saul’s kingship (
Hereditary kingship began after David’s death. His son, Solomon, though not his first-born son, succeeded David on the throne. After Solomon’s death, the kingdom split into two: Israel, or the northern kingdom and Judah, the southern kingdom. Each kingdom, with its own monarch, followed different means of succession. In Judah, God promised King David that his “house” or lineage would rule the United Monarchy forever (
Dynastic succession was never fully established in the north due to rebellion, warfare, and coups; Israel was ruled by an alternating series of ruling families and independent kings until its destruction in 722 BCE. Jeroboam, who was an administrator in Solomon’s court and not a relative, was installed as first king of the northern kingdom of Israel.
Primogeniture
In ancient Israel, the firstborn son held legal and social privileges and duties, such as inheritance property rights, paternal blessing, and responsibility of the household.
A concubine is a secondary wife who, while enjoying the same rights as a legitimate wife, did not have the legal standing of a first wife. Each male child of the same father had equal rights regardless of his mother’s status, so if he was the first-born son (of a concubine) he should be the heir. However, agnatic primogeniture was often not enforced, as the biblical narrative attests. For example, in