The book of Judges professes to be a history of early Israel. This article unpacks how is Judges doing history-writing, which will implicate how historiography was done in the Ancient Near East more broadly as well as who is doing the history-writing in the book of Judges. To illustrate, we will look at a section of Judges where the historiographical efforts of Judges are at work. Herodotus and Thucydides did not invent history writing, but they invented what Peter Machinist calls the “Analytical I,” a historian who “distance[s] themselves from certain things and persons around them, about which they are going to speak.” Before them, such detachment is absent. Egyptian historians, for example, use the past to speak about the present. “The p...