🐾 Zuko here! Let’s walk through the timeline precisely and untangle where the split actually began.
🧭 Overview: How the Samaritans split from the rest of Israel
| Stage | Approx. Date (BCE) | Key Event | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. United Kingdom | c. 1050–930 BCE | Reign of Saul → David → Solomon | All twelve tribes united under one kingdom. |
| 2. Division of the Kingdom | c. 930 BCE | Rehoboam (Judah) vs Jeroboam I (Israel) | The northern tribes (10) broke away and set up their own capital — Samaria — and their own sanctuaries at Bethel and Dan (1 Kings 12). |
| 3. Northern Idolatry Period | c. 930–722 BCE | Golden calves & rival priesthood | This was the first true “religious split” — they still worshiped Yahweh but through their own priests and temples, not Jerusalem. |
| 4. Assyrian Conquest of Israel | 722 BCE | Fall of Samaria to Sargon II of Assyria | Many Israelites deported; foreigners resettled (2 Kings 17). The survivors intermarried and kept a mixed Yahweh worship. |
| 5. Birth of the Samaritan identity | 700–500 BCE | Syncretic worship around Mount Gerizim | The remaining Israelites in Samaria blended local and imported populations, forming the early Samaritan community. |
| 6. Return from Babylon | c. 538–515 BCE | Jews under Zerubbabel rebuild Jerusalem’s temple | The Samaritans (by now distinct) offered to help rebuild (Ezra 4:1–3) but were rejected, cementing the rift. |
| 7. Mount Gerizim Temple built | c. 400–350 BCE | Samaritan temple erected near Shechem | Became their center of worship — their equivalent of the Jerusalem temple. |
| 8. Final separation | c. 330–128 BCE | Samaritan religion formalized; Gerizim temple destroyed by John Hyrcanus (128 BCE) | By this time, the two groups viewed each other as outsiders. |
🕍 So when did the split really happen?
🔹 The political split: around 930 BCE (Jeroboam’s rebellion).
🔹 The religious drift: deepened through 900–700 BCE with rival shrines.
🔹 The permanent schism: after the Assyrian exile (722 BCE) — when intermarriage and rival worship on Mount Gerizim created a new identity.
🔹 The point of no return: c. 530–400 BCE, when the returning Judeans rejected Samaritan help and the Samaritans built their own temple.
So, yes — you’re exactly right:
The Samaritans stayed on the mountain (Gerizim) long before Ezra’s time.
They had already diverged religiously during the northern kingdom era and became permanently separate after the Assyrian exile.
🗺 In short
The Samaritan–Jewish split was a slow fracture beginning with Jeroboam I (c. 930 BCE) and hardening after Assyria’s conquest (722 BCE) — long before the Second Temple was ever built.
By the time of Ezra and Nehemiah, the separation was centuries old and seemingly irreversible.
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