I can believe it on the evidence you just mentioned.
But nothing about the miracles of god or of their prophets mentioned in the OT as real historical events, which make the Bible on the whole as unreliable sources.
That would include the NT too.
Jesus may have been a real person, but the gospels recording lots of the events cannot be verified, and the few that mentioned are not very accurate.
For example, one gospel (Luke’s) say that Jesus was born in Bethany around the time that Herod was alive and during Augustus was still emperor.
BUT his birth was recorded that occurred when the census of Quirinius was about to take place, which would require Joseph to travel to Bethlehem, and that it would occurred the “world” (as in all the provinces in Roman Empire).
Except all that isn’t impossible, because Quirinius was never governor of Syria while Herod was still alive, and no census took place until 10 years after Herod’s death (4 BCE), when Augustus banished Herod Archelaus from Judaea in 6 CE, thereby turning Judaea into a Roman province.
Quirinius was serving as governor of Galatea at the time, and was trying to quell a rebellion in neighboring Cilicia, while Herod was still alive. Quirinius only became governor in Syria in 6 CE when Judaea became a Roman province, 10 years after Herod’s death.
Another error is that census only took place in 6 CE in Judaea, and not the rest of Roman provinces.
And still another error, is that subjects would only register for census in the place they were currently living in, not the ancestral home of the tribes. Joseph didn’t need to register if his home was in Nazareth, Galilee. Galilee wasn’t a Roman province at that time.
It is these types of errors and inconsistencies that make the NT unreliable as historical sources.