You ask concerning the neo- Babylonian tablets concerning their list of kings
No, I didn't. I am NOT talking about "king lists".
Most people don't understand that there are different types of tablets, different genres, if you will.
There are histories, such as the Babylonian Chronicles.
There are inscriptions.
There are astronomical and mathematical texts.
There are stamped clay bricks used in buildings.
But what I am talking about are the thousands of mundane tablets which deal with ordinary, everyday life. Just as we all have piles of dated documents around our own homes, the neo-Babylonians had dated records of their ordinary transactions.
Bills of sale, invoices, promissory notes, letters about dividing inheritances, bookkeeping accounts of cattle herds, etc. etc. Just boring, everyday activities, but because they were recorded on clay tablets, they have been preserved in the tens of thousands. These tablets do not have lists of kings. They are simply everyday documents dated to the month, day, and year of the current king.
And we have dated tablets for each year of each king. I was just looking over my files, and the records for Nabopolassar alone go on for page after page after page.
The evidence is so conclusive and so overwhelming that I can only think that perhaps you have never spent time looking at the texts of the actual tablets. If you have confined your research on chronology to secondary and tertiary sources, that may be why you just don't seem to grasp the sheer volume of data which we have.
If you refuse to accept the conventional chronology's list of kings and regnal lengths, then, logically, you must be positing a) an unknown king or kings, b) interregnum years, or c) additional years for one of the known kings.
It is interesting, however, that the WT is on record for accepting the known kings with their immediate successors and with the conventional regnal lengths. Do you consider the WT to have erred when it published that information?
For anyone who cares, the article I was looking at is D.A. Kennedy, "Documentary Evidence for the Economic Base of Early neo-Babylonian Society. Part II: A Survey of Babylonian texts, 626 - 605 BC, " Journal of Cuneiform Studies, Vol. 38, No. 2, 1986, pp. 172 - 244.
The list of published dated tablets for Nabopolassar extends from p. 178 - p. 214 in Kennedy's article.
I do not give a hoot about reconciling the secular data or Jonsson's flawed 14 lines of so called evidence. You have to decide what to accept and what is most credible. The Bible or secular chronology. The wise and smart Christian will always put God's Word first.
This has nothing to do with Jonsson. Academic journal articles do not include him in their footnotes. He has done an outstanding job of collating and summarizing the data, but he is not proposing any new hypothesis.
And, again, you are simply deluding yourself if you think there is a dichotomy between the Bible and secular chronology. Don't you realize that "real" history and Bible history agree?
The conventional chronology is in complete harmony with the Bible, whereas the WT chronology is at odds with the Bible. To take one example, you cannot reconcile Daniel 2:1 and the three years training, can you? I have asked and asked you to explain how year 7 + 3-years-training = year 20. Since you have failed to respond, I can only assume that you do not have an answer.
Marjorie