Sunday, February 8, 2026

Machiavelli in the name Achitophel, Galileo Galilei in the name Gamaliel

 


 

by

Damien F. Mackey

 

 

The names Gamaliel and Galileo (Galilei) may perhaps be

a fit even better than were Achitophel and Machiavelli.

 

  

1.    Machiavelli and the Prince mirror Achitophel and Absalom

 

The story of King David’s shrewd counsellor, Jonadab, as recounted in 2 Samuel 13, can seem to come to a disappointingly abrupt conclusion, just when it was getting really interesting. We would like to know more. How did it all play out in the end?

 

Andrew E. Hill had, in the course of his terrific commentary, “A Jonadab Connection in the Absalom Conspiracy?” (JETS 30/4, December, 1987, 387-390), expressed a certain frustration due to what he called “the almost annoying paucity of material for careful analysis” regarding Jonadab.

 

Well, appropriately, the Grand Master of Intrigue, Jonadab - most ably abetted by David’s conspiratorial son, Absalom - has yet another trick up his sleeve, as he continues to operate later, in 2 Samuel 16-17, but now under the name of Achitophel, so that the story does become complete. There is no abrupt termination, except for Achitophel, who “put his house in order and then hanged himself” (2 Samuel 17:23).

 

What really struck me, when following this fascinating web of intrigue, through, now Jonadab, and now, Achitophel, is how much the shrewd counsellor of such high reputation mirrored Machiavelli – (and how Absalom mirrored Machiavelli’s Prince).

 

I am not alone here.

Melamed (see below) recognised in this intrigue “the House of Borgia in the ancient ... land of Israel”.

 

One of the articles that I subsequently wrote on this subject was:

 

Achitophel and Machiavelli

 

(4) Achitophel and Machiavelli

 

….

Jonadab and Achitophel are comparable, then, as to general chronology; expert counsel - though with a malicious edge; counsellor to the king and his sons; but (if Hill is right about Jonadab) siding with Absalom (no doubt with the intention of becoming the power behind the throne after the passing of David); possible Egyptian influence.

 

Furthermore, just as Jonadab’s counsel will involve the exercise of Amnon’s lust, so will Achitophel’s counsel require Absalom’s sleeping with his father’s concubines.

 

Ahithophel is Part of the Conspiracy (II Samuel 15:10-12)


I Chronicles 27:33 says that Ahithophel was the king’s counselor. He must have been a very gifted and recognized personality. David and Ahithophel not only worshipped God together; they were the best of friends who shared their hearts. Yea, mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread, hath lifted up his heel against me. (Psalm 41:9)

 

For it was not an enemy that reproached me; then I could have borne it: neither was it he that hated me that did magnify himself against me; then I would have hid myself from him:

 

But it was thou, a man mine equal, my guide, and mine acquaintance. We took sweet counsel together, and walked unto the house of God in company. (Psalm 55:12-14)

 

Ahithophel becomes a traitor! It is apparent from the above verses that many of the people were not aware of what Absalom intended to do, but Ahithophel seems to have been part of the conspiracy. It is possible that Ahithophel even suggested such an act to Absalom. Whatever the case may have been, Ahithophel, who was offering sacrifices in Gilo, didn’t hesitate to join Absalom in his plan to violently dethrone his father (II Samuel 15:12).

 

Achitophel and Machiavelli

 

W. Thomas has a keen eye to Machiavelli as he describes Dryden’s Achitophel, in The Crafting of Absalom and Achitophel: Dryden’s Pen for a Party, pp. 57-58:

 

Certainly in tradition ever afterwards Achitophel has been the archetype of the evil counsellor.

 

To this archetype Dryden has added the figure of Machiavelli, the courtier who, for himself and for the person he advises, gives counsel aimed, in however devious and underhanded a way, at promoting the advancement of personal political ambition.

 

It is this double figure that Dryden first introduces. He takes the Biblical Achitophel,

 

Of these the false Achitophel was first:

A Name to all succeeding Ages Curst.

 

fastens on hisCounsell” in the next line, but makes it “crooked” in the manner of Machiavelli and equates it with something else Machiavellian, saying that he is "For close Designs, and crooked Counsell fit”.

….

 

But it is more from Machiavelli that Dryden draws, than from the Bible, when he elaborates further on his Achitophel (lines 173-174):

 

In Friendship False, Implacable in Hate.

Resolv’d to Ruine or to Rule the State.

 

And it is to Machiavelli that he looks when he makes his Achitophel, in a reversal of the Biblical situation, invite his Absalom to join him in rebellion against David.

 

Throughout, in this fictitious construct, Dryden has added, to his Biblical and traitorous Achitophel, the ambitious and scheming Machiavelli.

 

Behind both Machiavelli and Achitophel is, of course, the earlier and larger archetype, Satan, whose name means “the adversary”. ….

 

In Bringing the Hidden to Light: The Process of Interpretation (edited by Kathryn F. Kravitz, Diane M. Sharon), we find the requisite (if Achitophel is Machiavelli) comparison now between Absalom and the Prince, Cesare Borgia (p. 181):

 

…. As Melamed pointed out, although Luzzatto's interpretation followed the literal meaning of the text and traditional Jewish commentators such as Kimi and Abrabanel, nevertheless he expressed it in the spirit and vocabulary of Machiavelli and the tradition of raison d’état; in Melamed's most felicitous formulation, “the House of Borgia in the ancient ... land of Israel”, Ahitophel plays Machiavelli to Absalom – his Cesare Borgia”.

….

However, it should be observed that Luzzatto was not endorsing the behaviour of Absalom but only indicating, in the context of his refutation of the allegation of Tacitus that the Jews were sexually immoral, how in the spirit of Machiavelli and raison d’état, a prince might acquire power. ….

 

“The House of Borgia in the ancient land of Israel …”. Hmmmm.

 

Nor are my suspicions of historical dubiousness lessened to any extent when I perceive that the name, Machiavelli, exists in the name, Achitophel, with some slight tweaking. Thus:

 

                                                               ACHI[T]OPHEL

 

                                                        [M]ACHI      AVELL[I]

 

2.   Galileo Galilei mirrors Gamaliel and his telescope

 

After it had occurred to me yesterday (7th February, 2026) that there was an amazing likeness between the names Galileo and Gamaliel (Gamliel), as formerly I had found to have been the case with Machiavelli and Achitophel (1. above), I then wondered if – as in the case of the latter pair – there may also be character and career likenesses.

 

While comparing a C16th-C17th Italian Catholic professor with a C1st Jewish Rabbi did not immediately seem to me like a promising prospect, one might, however, recall “Melamed's most felicitous formulation, “the House of Borgia in the ancient ... land of Israel”.”

 

Both Machiavelli and Galileo purportedly lived during the era of the Medici family.

Machiavelli and the Medici (Chapter 4) - The Cambridge Companion to Machiavelli

“The Medici played a central role in Machiavelli's life and works. Until 1494 he lived in a city dominated by them, and from 1498 to 1512 he was employed by a government to which they represented a threat and an alternative focus of allegiance for discontented Florentines. When, after eighteen years of exile, they returned to Florence in 1512, the Medici removed Machiavelli from the chancery and his other posts, but he strove subsequently to win their favor, most famously by dedicating The Prince first to Giuliano de' Medici, an idea he had to abandon, and subsequently to Giuliano's nephew, the younger Lorenzo”.

 

The Galileo Project | Galileo | Patrons | Medici Family

“In the year of his accession, Ferdinand married Christina of Lorraine (1565-1637), who was the grand daughter of Catherine de' Medici, Queen of France. Christina was well-disposed to Galileo and as a favor in return for some services rendered by Galileo when he was still in Padua found a position for his brother in law Benedetto Landucci. It was to Christina that Galileo later wrote his letter on science and scripture, "Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina of Lorraine".”

 

Although my efforts to identify some compelling similarities between Gamaliel I and Galileo were not remarkably fruitful, Gamaliel II shaped up the better in this regard.

 

{Note: Whether or not there were actually two of them (I and II) would still need to be positively determined, as we have found that multiplications of same names can sometimes occur due to chronological flaws. In fact, doubts are expressed at: Gamaliel - Encyclopedia of The Bible - Bible Gateway “The one mentioned in Acts is known as Gamaliel ha-zaqen, “Gamaliel the Elder,” and lived during the first Christian cent. Tradition states that his grandfather was none other than Hillel the Elder. However, as with many other legends about him, this statement is unsupported by reliable documents. He often is confused with his grandson also named Gamaliel, and like the first a patriarch of the Sanhedrin”}.

 

Zoning in on mathematics and astronomy, considered to have been amongst the academic specialities of Galileo, I had some immediate success:

 

The Jewish Spiritual Heroes, Volume I; The Creators of the Mishna, Rabban Gamliel II of Jabneh | Sefaria Library

“Rabban Gamliel was also versed in the knowledge of mathematics and astronomy”.

 

In the next sentence it got even better:

 

To derive practical benefits from this knowledge he had a type of telescope made with which he could discern objects at a distance of two thousand ells both on land and on sea. In his house he had numerous drawings of the moon and when ignorant witnesses came to announce the new moon, they could point to the picture most nearly resembling what they saw.

 

Now, at last, this reads just like Galileo Galilei!

 

Isn’t it extraordinary, though, how we (so-called) Westerners like to attribute to ourselves inventions that we did not actually invent!

Much, for instance, has been inaccurately accredited to the ancient Greeks:

 

Beware of Greeks boasting inventions

 

(2) Beware of Greeks boasting inventions

 

See also my related article:

 

Beware of Greeks Bearing Myths

 

(2) Beware of Greeks Bearing Myths

 

In a similar vein, Islam likes to think that it was at the forefront of so many intellectual, cultural and technological (scientific) achievements. But see my article:

 

Melting down the fake Golden Age of Islamic intellectualism

 

(2) Melting down the fake Golden Age of Islamic intellectualism

 

The telescope was not invented, so we are told, until the early C17th AD:

Who really invented the telescope? - BBC Science Focus Magazine

“Telescopes have been vital to science since Dutch spectacle maker Hans Lippershey patented the now-familiar arrangement of lenses in 1608”.

 

Galileo, for his part, has become known as the “Father of Modern Science” and more:

 

Why Is Galileo Considered The Father Of Modern Science

“Galileo Galilei, born in 1564 in Pisa, Italy, is widely regarded as the Father of Modern Science due to his groundbreaking contributions in varied fields including physics, astronomy, and mathematics. Recognized for pioneering the experimental scientific method, Galileo utilized the refracting telescope to make groundbreaking astronomical discoveries, significantly altering the perception of the cosmos. Historians and philosophers agree that his work marked the inception of modern science, earning him titles such as the “father of observational astronomy”, “father of modern physics”, and “father of the scientific method”.”

 

Astronomy:Galileo affair - HandWiki

“Galileo also engaged in a dispute over the reasons that objects float or sink in water, siding with Archimedes against Aristotle. The debate was unfriendly, and Galileo's blunt and sometimes sarcastic style, though not extraordinary in academic debates of the time, made him enemies”. 

 

I, however, have lately questioned the historicity of this Archimedes:

 

Did the Greeks derive their Archimedes from Sargon II’s Akhimiti?

 

(6) Did the Greeks derive their Archimedes from Sargon II's Akhimiti?

 

The names Gamaliel and Galileo (Galilei) may perhaps be a fit even better than were Achitophel and Machiavelli.

 

                                                               GA[M]A LIE[L]

 

                                                               GA[L] I   LEO

 

What else, if anything, can be matched?

 

 

Apart from the name likenesses, the expertise in mathematics and astronomy, the use of a telescope and observations of the moon, calendrical considerations, Gamaliel and Galileo were famous, both then and now, and appear to have shared the same sort of autocratic, self-opinionated character - though they could also be kind.

 

Sefaria Library

“Being a descendant of Hillel, Rabban Gamliel was looked up to as a scion of the Royal House of David, and as long as one such remained, no one doubted his rights to the office of Nasi”.

 

Galileo | Biography, Discoveries, Inventions, & Facts | Britannica

“[Galileo] … obtained the chair of mathematics at the University of Pisa in 1589”.

 

We have also read how scientifically significant Galileo is regarded as being today: “… the Father of Modern Science … the “father of observational astronomy”, “father of modern physics”, and “father of the scientific method”.”

 

Gamaliel II | Pharisee, Rabbi, Talmud | Britannica

“Gamaliel ended the division of Jewish spiritual leaders—some of whom belonged to the school of Hillel and others to that of Shammai—by ruling that Hillel’s more lenient interpretations of Jewish Law were authoritative. He devoted special attention to the regulation of prayer ritual, which had become all-important since the cessation of sacrificial worship. He gave the principal prayer, the ʿamida, consisting of 18 (subsequently 19) benedictions, its final revision and declared that it was every Israelite’s duty to recite it three times daily.

 

By asserting his authority to standardize the Jewish calendar and thus fix the dates of festivals, Gamaliel further unified all Jews. He was recognized as patriarch (leader of the people) by Rome, and his reforms raised the power and prestige of the patriarchate”.

 

Astronomical and scientific disputes

 

One of the chief opponents of Rabban Gamliel was Rabbi Joshua ben Chanania. Rabbi Joshua was known as a gentle peace loving man. He was always dissatisfied with the innovations of Rabban Gamliel but he was powerless to contradict them because of his great poverty. Rabbi Joshua gained his livelihood from making needles.

 

At that time there did not yet exist a definitely established calendar. Every month messengers were sent out to observe the appearance of the new moon and even though the scholars could calculate the exact moment of the appearance of the moon, it was prohibited to decide on the day of the new month without the testimony of witnesses who saw the new moon. On the basis of such testimony Rabban Gamliel once determined the day of the new year and of all the other holidays of the month of Tishri. But even as the witnesses were testifying to having observed the new moon, Rabbi Joshua felt convinced that their testimony was false for according to all possible calculations it was impossible for the new moon to have appeared. Gathering courage Rabbi Joshua told the Nasi that he was wrong in setting the date of the holidays on the basis of such testimony. This opinion was also supported by other scholars but Rabban Gamliel was adamant and refused to alter his decision. He turned to Rabbi Joshua and said: “If you have another calculation of the holidays, then I command you to appear before me carrying your cane and wallet in your hand and your bag on your shoulders on the day which you consider to be the right Day of Atonement.”

 

Gamaliel II | Pharisee, Rabbi, Talmud | Britannica

“During his administration, Gamaliel frequently became dictatorial toward dissenters; at one point, he excommunicated his own brother-in-law. Because of his harsh methods, he was deposed, but he was later restored to power”.

 

Similarly with Galileo, as we read above: “The debate was unfriendly, and Galileo's blunt and sometimes sarcastic style, though not extraordinary in academic debates of the time, made him enemies”. 

 

Just like Gamaliel, Galileo did not suffer fools gladly:

February 15: The Life and Achievements of Galileo Galilei - 365 Days of Astronomy

“Galileo was said to anger quickly, but was easily calmed. He was an excellent speaker and teacher, and had a lot of friends in high places. One thing that can be said about Galileo is that he did not suffer fools gladly, and he had a tendency to think that anyone who disagreed with him was a fool. This attitude would get him in trouble many times, most famously of course, with the Catholic Church”.

 

Humiliated - deposed, excommunicated (summoned to Rome)

 

Sefaria Library

One of the pupils came to ask whether the reciting of the evening prayer (מעריב) was obligatory or voluntary. Rabbi Joshua told him that it was voluntary and one could do as he chose.

 

The same pupil then asked this question of Rabban Gamliel who decided that the reciting of the “Maariv” was obligatory. The pupil then asked: “How is it that Rabbi Joshua declared it to be voluntary?” and Rabban Gamliel answered: “Wait until all the scholars come to the academy and we will discuss this matter.”

 

When all the scholars gathered Rabban Gamliel declared, “I have ordained that the reciting of the evening prayer is obligatory”; saying this he turned to the assembled, “is anyone opposed to this decision?”

“No one is opposed,” Rabbi Joshua answered. Upon hearing this Rabban Gamliel said, “Joshua, stand up and a witness will testify that you have ordered otherwise before.”

 

Rabbi Joshua obeyed and arose; he stood for a long time before Rabban Gamliel told him to return to his place. The other scholars could no longer tolerate the overbearing attitude of the Nasi; there was an uproar of protest against his conduct and the impeachment of Rabban Gamliel from his office was taken to a vote.

….

 

Rabban Gamliel remained impeached for only a short time. It seems that only a few days passed before he was reinstated. The sudden outburst of the scholars against his severe conduct produced such a change in him that everyone was moved to pity. When the scholars saw that the aristocratically reared Rabban Gamliel bowed without complaint before the will of the people and that he did not break with the academy, from the presidency of which he was removed, but immediately adapted himself to his new status and took his place among the other pupils as an equal, they realized that they were overhasty and immediately considered a reconciliation.

 

Only then was it realized what noble traits Rabban Gamliel possessed.

 

He was terribly humiliated; no one even thought of sparing the honor of the Nasi’s family which derived, through Hillel, from king David; only a day before everyone bowed before him, and suddenly the same people turned against him.

 

Nevertheless he accepted the verdict of the people and did not absent himself from the academy for even one hour, although he fully realized that his situation was a very difficult one, for all his previous decisions would be reconsidered and all of his disciples of the past would attempt to prove them to be wrong.

 

But instead of dwelling on what happened to him he considered his behavior toward others and realized that he conducted himself too severely. He then went to Rabbi Joshua to ask his forgiveness. When he saw the darkened walls of the low narrow house in which Rabbi Joshua lived, he said, “from the walls of your house one can tell your occupation.” Believing that this was said with the intent to slight him, Rabbi Joshua answered, “Woe to the generation which has a leader like you, for you have no understanding for the suffering of the scholars and you do not know how they gain their livelihood.”

 

Rabban Gamliel said to him, “Now that I came to you, forgive me! Do so for the sake of the honor of my family.”

 

Rabbi Joshua was deeply touched at these words and readily became reconciled.

….

 

Peace was thus re-established in the academy of Jabneh and Rabban Gamliel remained Nasi until his death. His later conduct also indicates that he relented some of his severity and if he treated someone more harshly than the occasion deserved, it evoked no protest. Meantime the decrees of Rome became more severe and Rabban Gamliel was frequently compelled to journey to Rome to intercede for the Jews and to effect the revocation of some decree or, at least, to ameliorate its effects. He was often accompanied by some of his comrades on these trips and he was invariably successful in the accomplishment of his mission. His aristocratic bearing and his fluent Greek speech gained for him the confidence of the court and of the highest officials of the empire.

 

Galileo arrives in Rome to face charges of heresy | February 13, 1633 | HISTORY

“On February 13, 1633, Italian philosopher, astronomer and mathematician Galileo Galilei arrives in Rome to face charges of heresy for advocating Copernican theory, which holds that the Earth revolves around the Sun. Galileo officially faced the Roman Inquisition in April of that same year and agreed to plead guilty in exchange for a lighter sentence. Put under house arrest indefinitely by Pope Urban VIII, Galileo spent the rest of his days at his villa in Arcetri, near Florence, before dying on January 8, 1642”.

 

Intelligent daughter

 

GAMALIEL II - JewishEncyclopedia.com

“Of Gamaliel's children, one daughter is known, who answered in a very intelligent fashion two questions addressed to her father by an unbeliever (Sanh. 34a, 90b)”.

 

Wikipedia

Galileo's daughter, Suor Maria Celeste, was a nun who maintained a close relationship with her father, Galileo Galilei, through her surviving letters. 

 

Friday, February 6, 2026

Wanting to know more about Ezra

 


 

by

 Damien F. Mackey

  

A reader has asked:

 

“Can you tell me more about Ezra?”

 

 

 

The truth is that I can tell a lot more about Ezra, too much to fit into this one article.

 

Here I shall simply run with my latest idea about Ezra, the one that I presented to the inquisitive reader for further information. I refer to my article:

 

High Priest, Jesus (Joshua), brand plucked out of the fire

 

(1) High Priest, Jesus (Joshua), brand plucked out of the fire

 

according to which Ezra, whom I had previously identified in articles as Azariah of the Fiery Furnace episode (Daniel 3), was also the same as the high priest, Jesus (Joshua), “a brand plucked out of the fire” (Zechariah 3:2).

 

The reader, obviously a follower of conventional dating, and apparently having little knowledge of my own revision of this, is perceptive enough, at least, to recognise immediately that my association of Ezra with Azariah, and with Jesus (Joshua), is chronologically (and biologically) impossible – as, indeed, it is, according to his context. Thus he writes, using all of the standard dates:

 

The claim is Azariah in the fiery furnace (Daniel 3, ~580s BCE under Nebuchadnezzar) is the same person as Ezra the scribe (~458 BCE under Artaxerxes).
For these to be the same person, Ezra would need to be:
A young man (~20) in the fiery furnace (585 BCE)
Still active as a scribe at age 147 (458 BCE). That's not possible.

To answer a reader such as this, who has no solid background about my revision, and who thus cannot argue from that foundation, I need to go all the way back and refer to articles in which I have addressed these sorts of problems and have greatly streamlined ancient history, starting with my two university theses (as summarised in):

 

Damien F. Mackey’s A Tale of Two Theses

 

(1)  Damien F. Mackey's A Tale of Two Theses

 

 

The dramatic revision of Israelite and Judean history that I have presented in this article, coupled with a corresponding reduction of contemporaneous Assyrian and Babylonian (Chaldean) history, is supplemented in many other articles of mine.

 

And the conventional Medo-Persian history and archaeology, and its inadequacies – relevant to a part of Ezra’s long life (traditionally 120 years) – is exposed in articles of mine such as:

 

Medo-Persian history has no adequate archaeology

 

(2) Medo-Persian history has no adequate archaeology

Not to mention that historians have totally mis-placed the land of Media itself:

 

Book of Tobit confirms that land of Media was in Cilicia

 

(2) Book of Tobit confirms that land of Media was in Cilicia

 

The reader then proposes that “The Logical Fix” is to recognise that persons of the same name have been conflated, “that composite stories” have been used:

 

The Logical Fix: "Azariah" is a TITLE, not a personal name
What if:
"Azariah" = a priestly/prophetic title (like "bishop" or "overseer")
Multiple people held this title across generations
The Azariah in the fiery furnace (580s BCE) ≠ Ezra
BUT Ezra also held the title "Azariah" later (450s BCE)
Writers conflated different "Azariahs" into composite stories
This would explain:
Why genealogies list "Azariah" multiple times
Ezra 7:3: "son of Azariah, the son of Hilkiah"
It's a recurring title in the priestly line, like "John Smith III"

Why "brand plucked from fire" gets reused
It's a formula applied to whoever currently holds the "Azariah" title
Zechariah 3:2 applies it to Joshua (the current high priest)
Not because Joshua was literally in a furnace, but because he survived the exile (metaphorical fire)
Why Sirach uses similar fire imagery
Standard priestly/wisdom literature metaphor
Not describing a literal event from 400 years earlier.



My own quite different findings, on the other hand, are that historians, archaeologists and geographers have, in some instances (with all due respect to the outstanding ones), made a complete mess of restoring the ancient world.

The subject is so vast, of course, that that is what is to be expected, in part.

 

What is not excusable, however, is when scholars refuse to learn from the glaring anomalies that they encounter. On this, see e.g. my article:

 

Dumb and Dumbfounded archaeology

 

(3) Dumb and Dumbfounded archaeology

 

If the reader had trouble accepting my equation of Ezra with Azariah, and with Jesus, the high priest at the time of the finishing of the Second Temple, then a fortiori does he find it totally impossible to embrace my identification of Ezra also with the supposedly far later Jesus ben Sirach, the author of the Book of Sirach, who, too, was, just like Azariah (nearly identical phrase) “in the heart of the fire [furnace]”.

Cf Daniel 3:20; Sirach 51:4).

 

But it still doesn't make the core claim work unfortunately.
Even with the title fix, their argument has a fundamental problem:
You claim these are all the SAME PERSON:
Ezra the scribe
Azariah in fiery furnace
Joshua the high priest
Jesus ben Sirach

We are now in the vicinity of Maccabean times, which would mean – and it seems impossible, and, indeed, it is by conventional terms – that Ezra’s life had spanned from Nebuchednezzar the Chaldean, right through the Medo-Persian period, and down into the time of the Hellenistic Greeks.

 

I could refer for support in this to a whole lot more of my articles, but this one will have to suffice. It is comprehensive and it is telling: Ezra (Esdras) still going strong in Maccabean times:

 

Ezra ‘Father of the Jews’ dying the death of Razis

 

(3) Ezra 'Father of the Jews' dying the death of Razis

 

The reader, rightly noting (in favour of my chronology) that Joshua and Ezra Were Contemporaries, is not able to show that they were named together in any text.

If Ezra = Joshua, why does the text: Never mention them together in the same scene?

 

Well, because Ezra/Joshua was the one and same person!

Thus the reader:

 

The evidence directly contradicts this:
1. Joshua and Ezra Were Contemporaries (Not Same Person)
The biblical text presents them as working together:

Ezra 3:2 (516 BCE - Temple rebuilding):
"Then Jeshua [Joshua] son of Jozadak and his fellow priests and Zerubbabel son of Shealtiel... began to build the altar... They set the altar on its foundation and sacrificed burnt offerings."
Ezra 5:2 (same period):
"Then Zerubbabel... and Jeshua son of Jozadak set to work to rebuild the house of God in Jerusalem."

Ezra doesn't appear until chapter 7 (458 BCE - 58 years later):
"In the seventh year of King Artaxerxes, Ezra came up from Babylon."

 

No, the Temple was completed in the 6th year of Darius “Artaxerxes”. And Ezra, who had gone back to Babylon to collect utensils, wealth and Levitical manpower to furnish the new Temple, returned next year (7th) - not, 458 BCE: Ezra arrives (58 years later).

 

The reader continues:

 

The chronology:
536 BCE: Zerubbabel and Joshua return, start rebuilding
516 BCE: Temple completed under Joshua as high priest
458 BCE: Ezra arrives (58 years later)
If Ezra = Joshua, why does the text:
Never mention them together in the same scene?
Present Joshua's work (516 BCE) as complete before Ezra arrives (458 BCE)?
List Joshua's descendants as high priests (Nehemiah 12:10-11) but never say "Joshua, also called Ezra"?

As already noted, Ezra lived even into Maccabean times.

 

Thus he, presumably, or an editor, was able to include in his praises of great men, in Sirach, which he authored, a eulogy of Simon Hasmonaean, a Maccabean priest.

 

2. Jesus ben Sirach Lived ~180 BCE (300+ Years Later)
Sirach 50:1-21 describes Simon son of Onias (Simon II):
"The leader of his brothers and the pride of his people was the high priest, Simon son of Onias, who in his life repaired the house... How glorious he was, surrounded by the people, as he came out of the house of the veil!"
Historical dating:
Simon II was high priest ~219-196 BCE
Sirach writes as an eyewitness to his ministry
This places the author ~180 BCE
Sirach 50:27 explicitly identifies himself:
"Jesus son of Eleazar son of Sira of Jerusalem"
This is 280 years after Ezra (458 BCE → 180 BCE)
Ezra, Seraiah, Azariah, 458 BCE
Joshua (High Priest), Jehozadak, Seraiah, 516 BCE
Jesus ben Sirach, Eleazar, Sira, 180 BCE
These genealogies don't match - different fathers, different grandfathers.

On the contrary, the genealogies are, I think, a pretty good match. Thus I had written:

 

Compare the genealogy of the high priest, Jesus, son of Jehozadak, son of Seraiah:

Topical Bible: Jehozadak

“[Jehozadak] is primarily recognized as the father of Jeshua (Joshua) the high priest, who played a crucial role in the rebuilding of the Temple after the Babylonian exile. Jehozadak was the son of Seraiah …”. 

 

Jehozadak, generally thought to have been Ezra’s brother, is actually omitted in Ezra’s impressive genealogy in Ezra 7:1-5:

 

Ezra son of Seraiah, the son of Azariah, the son of Hilkiah, the son of Shallum, the son of Zadok, the son of Ahitub, the son of Amariah, the son of Azariah, the son of Meraioth, the son of Zerahiah, the son of Uzzi, the son of Bukki, the son of Abishua, the son of Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron the chief priest ….

 

But the genealogy is widely regarded as being not a fully comprehensive one:

In Ezra 7:1-5, how do we reconcile the seemingly abbreviated genealogy of Ezra with other Old Testament genealogical records that appear longer or contradictory?

The genealogy of Ezra in Ezra 7:11 traces his lineage back to Aaron, the chief priest, highlighting his priestly authority. Ezra's genealogy is succinct, omitting some generations, which is typical in biblical genealogies”.

 

Ezra (Azariah) was son of Jehozadak, son of Seraiah.

The high priest, Jesus, was son of Jehozadak, son of Seraiah.

Jesus (author of Sirach), was son of Eleazer, son of Sira[ch].

 

As Azariah, Ezra was in the Burning Fiery Furnace.

As the high priest, Jesus, he was “plucked out of the fire”.

And so, apparently, as Jesus ben Sirach, was he “in the heart of a fire” (Sirach 51:1, 2, 4):

 

‘I will give thanks to you, Lord and King … for you have been protector and

support to me, and redeemed my body from destruction … from the stifling heat which hemmed me in, from the heart of a fire which I had not kindled’.

 

Sirach 51:1, 2, 4

 

 

Saved ‘from the heart of a fire’, ‘hemmed in’ by its ‘stifling heat’.

Could Jesus ben Sirach’s account here be a graphic description by one who had actually stood in the heart of the raging fire? - had stood inside “the burning fiery furnace” of King Nebuchednezzar? (Daniel 3:20).

 

The ONLY Way to Fix This
You'd have to argue:
"Later scribes/editors CONFLATED multiple historical figures (Azariah + Ezra + Joshua + ben Sirach) into composite narratives, similar to how the Gospels conflated Emmanuel ben Judas + Joseph ben Ananias into one 'Jesus.'"
This would mean:
The biblical narrative we have is already a composite
We're trying to separate the original historical figures
"Azariah in furnace" (580s BCE) was one person
Ezra (458 BCE) was a different person
Joshua (516 BCE) was a different person
Jesus ben Sirach (180 BCE) was a different person
Later editors blended their stories through shared titles/metaphors.
The irony: your methodology (identifying composite figures) might actually work in REVERSE - showing how different historical "Jesus/Joshua" figures got conflated in tradition - which is exactly what my research does for the 1st century CE!