World at War / Conflicts / Wars of Scripture
Wars of Scripture
Wars of King David
1003–970 BC
Levant
Status: ended
Casualties: Tens of thousands across decades of campaign
David took the Jebusite stronghold of Zion and made it his city. He broke Philistia, smote Moab and measured them with a line, garrisoned Edom, slew 22,000 Syrians of Damascus, and stretched his border to the Euphrates. 2 Samuel 5–10. The high-water mark of Israel.
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Belligerents
- Kingdom of Israel under David
- Jebusites
- Philistines
- Moabites
- Edomites
- Ammonites
- Aram-Zobah
- Aram-Damascus
Casualties
Tens of thousands across decades of campaign
Key events
- Jerusalem taken from the Jebusites by water-shaft (Joab first up)
- Philistines broken at Baal-Perazim and again in the valley of Rephaim
- Moab measured with two lines to put to death, one full line to keep alive
- Edom garrisoned; 18,000 in the valley of salt
- Hadadezer of Zobah broken; Damascus garrisoned; tribute from Hamath
- Rabbah of Ammon taken — and Uriah the Hittite set in the forefront of the hottest battle
Aftermath
Borders from the Brook of Egypt to the Euphrates — the largest extent Israel ever held. The promise to David ('I will set up thy seed after thee') becomes the messianic line every later prophet looks back to.
Weapons & matériel
- Bronze and iron swords
- The Cherethites and Pelethites (royal guard)
- The Thirty mighty men — Adino, Eleazar, Shammah, Benaiah son of Jehoiada
Sources
- 2 Samuel 5–10
- 1 Chronicles 11–20
- Psalm 60
From World at War, an interactive atlas by Jairus Pereira.
Figures are approximate, drawn from Wikipedia, UCDP, ACLED and academic sources — a design
artefact, not an authoritative register. Contact.