Patriarchal Palestine eBook

Archibald Sayce
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about Patriarchal Palestine.

Patriarchal Palestine eBook

Archibald Sayce
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about Patriarchal Palestine.

The list has thus led us to the foot of Mount Ephraim, and it is not surprising that the next name should be that of the Har or “Mountain” itself.  This is followed by a name which is full of interest, for it reads Joseph-el or “Joseph-god.”  How the name of Joseph came to be attached in the time of Thothmes to the mountainous region in which “the House of Joseph” afterwards established itself is hard to explain; we must remember, however, as has been stated in a former chapter, that according to the Chronicler (1 Chron. vii. 21, 22), already in the lifetime of Ephraim his sons were slain by the men of Gath, “because they came down to take away their cattle.” (Mr. Pinches tells me that in early Babylonian contracts of the age of Chedor-laomer he has found the name of Yasupu-ilu or Joseph-el, as well as that of Yakub-ilu or Jacob-el.  The discovery is of high importance when we remember that Abraham migrated from Ur of the Chaldees, and adds another to the many debts of gratitude due to Mr. Pinches from Biblical students.  See Preface for further details.)

Three names further on we find another compound with el, Har-el, “the mount of God.”  In Ezek. xliii. 15 Har-el is used to denote the “altar” which should stand in the temple on Mount Moriah, and Mount Moriah is itself called “the Mount of the Lord” in the Book of Genesis (xxii. 14).  It may be, therefore, that in the Har-el of the Egyptian list we have the name of the mountain whereon the temple of Solomon was afterwards to be built.  However this may be, the names which follow it show that we are in the neighbourhood of Jerusalem.  One after the other come Lebau, Na’mana or Na’amah (Josh. xv. 41), Meromim “the heights,” ’Ani “the two springs,” Rehob, Ekron, Hekalim “the palaces,” the Abel or “meadow” of Autar’a, the Abel, the Gantau or “gardens,” the Maqerput or “tilled ground,” and the ’Aina or “Spring” of Carmel, which corresponds with the Gath-Carmel of the Tel el-Amarna tablets, the Carmel of Judah of the Old Testament.  Then we have Beth-Ya, a name which reminds us of that of “Bithia, the daughter of Pharaoh,” whom Mered, the descendant of Caleb, took to wife, and whose stepson was Yered, “the father of Gedor” (1 Chron. iv. 18).  Beth-Ya is followed by Tapun, which was fortified by the Greeks after the death of Judas Maccabaeus (1 Macc. ix. 50), by the Abel of Yertu or Yered, perhaps the district of the Jordan, by Halkal, and by Jacob-el, a name formed in the same way as that of Joseph-el.  We may see in it an evidence that the memory of the patriarch was kept alive in the south of Palestine.  The next two names are unknown, but they are followed by Rabatu or Rabbah of Judah, Magharatu, the Ma’arath of Josh, xv. 59, ’Emequ, “the valley” of Hebron, Sirta and Bartu, the Bar has-Sirak, or “Well of Sirah” of 2 Sam. iii. 26.  Then come Beth-sa-el or Beth-el in its Babylonian dress; Beth-Anta or Beth-Anath (Josh. xv. 59), where the Babylonian goddess Anatu was worshipped; Helkath (2 Sam. ii. 16); the Spring of Qan’am; Gibeah of Judah (2 Sam. vi. 3, 4; see Josh. xviii. 28); Zelah (Josh. xviii. 28), called Zilu by Ebed-Tob of Jerusalem; and Zafta, the Biblical Zephath (Judges i. 17).  The last three names in the catalogue—­Barqna, Hum, and Aktomes—­have left no traces in Scriptural or classical geography.

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Patriarchal Palestine from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.