The Tobiad family, most probably named after their ancestor bearing the name Tuvia (Tobias) ("God is my good" or "Good is my God"), a name which remained in the family by
papponymy and
patronymy for several hundred years, received its noble status possibly during the
First Temple Period and retained it until the death of their last scion, Hyrcanus. Though no complete history of the Tobiad family has survived, a partial narrative may be reconstructed, based on the many diverse literary and historical sources and archaeological remains upon which they left their mark. The written sources include the
Lachish letters, the letters from
Nimrud, the books of
Isaiah,
Nehemiah and
Zachariah, the
Zenon papyri, the books of
Maccabees and the writings of
Josephus. Archaeological remains include
Qasr al-Abd and other remains from
Iraq al-Amir in today's Jordan.
First Temple Period As
Benjamin Mazar established, there were influential families in the
Kingdom of Judah who held estates in the
Transjordan who did not necessarily lose their lands even when the
Neo-Assyrian Empire destroyed the Kingdom of Israel. Mazar suggested that the Tobiads were prominent landowners in the Transjordan who were exiled from their lands by
Tiglath-Pileser III. Based on the account in the book of
Chronicles, he concluded that the Tobiad's rise to prominence and their ownership of land in
Ammon occurred during the reign of King
Uzziah of Judah and his son
Jotham, who were said to have been victorious over the
Ammonites. This would explain their residence in the area from shortly thereafter. A probable mention of an ancestor to the Tobiads from the
8th century BCE is in the
Book of Isaiah, within the context of the kings of
Aram and
Israel trying to depose the
Kings of Judah and replace him with a figure by the name of Tobel: According to
Naftali Herz Tur-Sinai,
King Josiah's reform of the 7th century BCE effected changes in personal names, and the
theophoric suffix
-el was converted to the suffix
-iahu. It follows that the name Tobel would be changed to Tobiah(u). Additionally, the prefix "son of" (
ben) was common among high officials in
Ugarit and in the biblical lists of King Solomon's officials, and as was posited by Alt, most probably denoted an office passed on from father to son, making the son of Tobel an individual of prominence and a link in a dynasty of sorts, something which would have made his replacement of the king more acceptable. Considering that some of the later kings of Israel, and even Pekah himself, had demonstrated strong ties with estate holders in
trans-Jordan, it is plausible that this Tobel was one of them. Further support for the presence of a ruler in
Ammon by the name of Tobel can be found in one of the
letters of Nimrud, dated from between the reigns of
Tiglath-Pileser III to
Sargon II, namely between 740–705 BCE, mentioning a messenger from the land of
Tabel and providing an account of a skirmish between the inhabitants of Gader and the people of
Moab, the latter famously bordering with Ammon. bearing the titles "Servant of the King" and "Arm of the King" (referring to
King Zedekiah), possibly serving as another testimony to the political status of the Tobiads and their relationship with the
Monarchy in Jerusalem, towards the end of the
First Temple Period.
Second Temple Period Achaemenid Empire Another source about a figure with the name Tobiah, placing him at about 519 BCE, can be seen in the
Book of Zechariah, where he is mentioned among other notable figures as part of "the branch" that shall rule in the future alongside the
High Priest of Israel and shall
rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem. Mazar proposed this individual to be the grandfather of Tobiah the Ammonite mentioned in the
Book of Nehemiah. "Tobiah The Servant, The Ammonite", is said to have conspired in 445 BCE with other land-owners,
Sanballat of Samaria and
Geshem the Arabian, to oppose
Nehemiah on the rebuilding of the walls of
Jerusalem, possibly due to the reform on land owning that Nehemiah forced through. it appears that this is referring to all the residents of the land of Tobiah, and it is possible that their lack of record is due to their residence outside of Judah or to the possibility that they neglected to take their records with them into exile. They eventually were accepted into the community, and that the aforementioned Tobiah was a Jew, was related by marriage to the High-Priest
Eliashiv, was on good terms with him to the point of having an office in the Temple court, and was listed among the "Nobles of Judah" along with some of his relatives. Though it is quite obvious that he was at odds with Nehemiah, seeing as the latter expelled him from the Temple and insisted that the place be ritually cleansed thereafter, According to Mazar, his title "Ammonite servant" refers to an official of high standing, and despite it being used scornfully, what is meant is "Ammonite servant of the king," i.e. servant to the
Achaemenid emperor, residing in Ammon. This title is generally seen to denote a rank providing ministerial services to the
Persians in Ammon, and there is reason to assume that Tobiah was the
governor there.
Hellenistic Period Among the business documents of
Zenon, secretary of
Apollonius, chief finance minister to
Ptolemy II Philadelphus, are two letters from a figure named Toubias, dated May 12 259 BCE, one addressed to Apollonius and the other to King Ptolemy. In these letters Toubias responds to a request by the king via Apollonius for him to send animals, due to the king's affinity to unusual beasts, and specifies the animals he sent, all of them domesticated. As a testimony of his high rank, Toubias addressed the king using the customary formula of subservience, though not in an exaggerated fashion, while he addressed Apollonius as an equal. Other papyri tell of Toubias providing Zenon and his company with pack animals ("beasts of burden") and flour on their journey through the region. Rosenberg concludes that "Toubias was head of a mixed-nationality
cleruchy or military community and indulged in breeding animals and slaves and supplying them to the
Ptolemaic Court. Tobias must have been an important local landowner, as he was on friendly terms not only with Appolonios but even with the ruler
Ptolemy II Philadelphos". Josephus wrote extensively about Joseph, the nephew of the High Priest
Onias and the son of Tobias. Although the known individuals mentioned in the account all belonged to patronymic and papponymic dynasties, their precise identities are still disputed among modern scholars, as are the precise dates of the events. According to this narrative, Joseph was granted the rights to
farm taxes from
Syria,
Phoenicia and
Samaria instead of his uncle Onias, by King Ptolemy, due to the former's refusal to pay
tribute to the latter, and did so for twenty-two years. It is further stated that Hyrcanus, the youngest of Joseph's seven sons, was sent to represent his family in Ptolemy's celebration in honor of the birth of his son. After killing two of his brothers in battle and being refused entry into
Jerusalem, Hyrcanus fled across the
Jordan. They set up the family estate where he lived in conflict with his Arab neighbors for seven years. and it can be viewed in light of the political upheavals in the region, which was a battleground for the
Syrian wars between the
Ptolemies and the
Seleucids during the 3rd–2nd centuries BCE. == The Tobiad Estate ==