This chart shows base numbers assuming zero mortality of either women in childbirth, or infant mortality.
Granted scripture shows us information that's relevant, but the vast majority of the women listed in genealogies seems to show that women didn't have 12+ children born to them during their lifespan. Most had between 3 and 6. But still at 6 children per woman on average, a man would need a minimum of 9 wives and this is all assuming zero children died in childbirth or before reaching the age where they are counted.
Even if we believed each woman was capable of producing 27 children in her lifetime, that's a minimum of 2 wives per man.
View attachment 4377
Very interesting. I hadn't thought about that before. That would seem to indicate that polygyny was common in Israel at the time.This chart shows base numbers assuming zero mortality of either women in childbirth, or infant mortality.
Granted scripture shows us information that's relevant, but the vast majority of the women listed in genealogies seems to show that women didn't have 12+ children born to them during their lifespan. Most had between 3 and 6. But still at 6 children per woman on average, a man would need a minimum of 9 wives and this is all assuming zero children died in childbirth or before reaching the age where they are counted.
Even if we believed each woman was capable of producing 27 children in her lifetime, that's a minimum of 2 wives per man.
View attachment 4377
It would also seem to suggest a significant sex imbalance at birth (which would facilitate polygyny). All those extra women had to come from somewhere.