here is another archaological find "the hittites"
THE HITTITES
The Hittites, mentioned some fifty times in the Old Testament, were considered for a long time to be a biblically fabricated people. That is, the biblical references to the Hittites used to be regarded as historically worthless. John Elder comments on modern confirmation of the Hittites:
One of the striking confirmations of Bible history to come from the science of archaeology is the recovery of the Hittite peoples and their empires. Here is a people whose name appears again and again in the Old Testament, but who in secular history had been completely forgotten and whose very existence was considered to be extremely doubtful....In Genesis 23:10, it is told that Abraham bought a parcel of land for a burying place from Ephron the Hittite. In Genesis 26:34, Esau takes a Hittite girl for a wife, to the great grief of his mother. In the Book of Exodus, the Hittites are frequently mentioned in the lists of people whose land the Hebrews set out to conquer. In Joshua 11:19, the Hittites join in the confederation of nations that try to resist Joshuas advance, only to be defeated by the waters of Merom. In Judges, intermarriage occurs between the Hebrews and the Hittites. In 1 Samuel 26, Hittites enroll in Davids army, and during the reign of Solomon he makes slaves of the Hittite element in his kingdom and allows his people to take Hittite wives. But until the investigations of modern archaeologists, the Hittites remained a shadowy and undefined people.12
Archaeologist A. H. Sayce was the first scholar to identify the Hittite people from a nonbiblical source, the monuments. In 1876 he released his information and revolutionized critical theory concerning the Hittites.
Since Sayces time in the last century, much information about the Hittites has been discovered, confirming again the historical accuracy of the Old Testament. Fred H. Wight concludes:
Now the Bible picture of this people fits in perfectly with what we know of the Hittite nation from the monuments. As an empire they never conquered the land of Canaan itself, although Hittite local tribes did settle there at an early date. Nothing discovered by the excavators has in any way discredited the biblical account. Scripture accuracy has once more been proved by the archaeologists.13
from:
McDowell, Josh: Josh McDowell's Handbook on Apologetics. electronic ed. Nashville : Thomas Nelson, 1997, c1991