Faces of Ancient Middle East Part 7 (Ancient Semites)
Ebla
Ebla (
Arabic: إبلا, modern
Tell Mardikh,
Idlib Governorate,
Syria) was an ancient city about 55 km southwest of
Aleppo. It was an important city-state in two periods, first in the late third millennium BC, then again between 1800 and 1650 BC.
The site is most famous for the
Ebla tablets, an archive of about 20,000 cuneiform tablets found there, dated from around
2250 BC, written in
Sumerian script to record the
Eblaite language — a previously unknown language that is now the earliest attested
Semitic language after the closely related
Akkadian.
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Canaan
Canaan included what today are
Lebanon,Palestin, northwestern
Jordan, and some western areas of Syria. According to archaeologist
Jonathan N. Tubb, "
Ammonites,
Moabites,
Israelites and
Phoenicians undoubtedly achieved their own cultural identities, and yet ethnically they were all Canaanites", "the same people who settled in farming villages in the region in the
8th millennium BC."
Ebla and
Amorites at
Hazor,
Kadesh (Qadesh-on-the-Orontes), and elsewhere in the
Syrian area bordered Canaan in the north and northeast. (
Ugarit may be included among these Amoritic entities.) Lebanon, in northern Canaan, bordered by the
Litani river to the watershed of the
Orontes river, was known by the
Egyptians as upper Retjenu. In
Egyptian campaign accounts, the term Djahi was used to refer to the watershed of the
Jordan river. Many earlier
Egyptian sources also mention numerous military campaigns conducted in Ka-na-na, just inside
Asia.
In biblical usage, the name was confined to the country west of the Jordan, the Canaanites being described as dwelling "by the sea, and along by the side of the Jordan" (
Numbers 33:51;
Joshua 22:9), and was especially identified with
Phoenicia (
Isaiah 23:11). The Philistines, while an integral part of the
Canaanite milieu, do not seem to have been ethnic Canaanites; the Hurrians (who spoke a language isolate), Hittites (Indo-European speakers), as well as the
Semitic Arameans, Moabites, and Ammonites, are also considered "distinct" from generic Canaanites/Amorites, in scholarship or in tradition, although in the biblical
Table of Nations, "
Heth", representing the Hittites, is a son of Canaan.
The Hittites spoke an
Indo-European language (called
Nesili), but their predecessors the
Hattians had spoken a little-known language (
Hattili), of uncertain affinities.
The biblical narrative makes a
point of the renaming of the "
Land of Canaan" to the "
Land of Israel" as marking the
Israelite conquest of the
Promised Land.
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Israelites
The Israelites (בני
ישראל,
Standard: Bnai Yisraʾel; Tiberian: Bnai Yiśrāʾēl;: Bnai Yiśraʾel, translated as: "
Children of Israel" or "
Sons of Israel") were a Semitic Hebrew-speaking people of the
Ancient Near East, who inhabited part of the Land of Canaan during the tribal and monarchic periods (15th to
6th centuries BCE), later evolving into the
Jews and
Samaritans, inhabiting the territories of
Judea and
Galilee, and
Samaria respectively. In modern
Hebrew usage, an Israelite is, broadly speaking, a lay member of the
Jewish ethnoreligious group, as opposed to the priestly orders of Kohanim and
Levites.
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Arameans
The Arameans were a
Northwest Semitic people who originated in what is now modern Syria (
Biblical Aram) during the
Late Bronze Age and the
Iron Age.
Large groups migrated to
Mesopotamia, where they intermingled with the native Akkadian (
Assyrian and Babylonian) population. A large proportion of
Syriac Christians in modern Syria still espouse an
Aramean identity to this day, though few now speak the
Western Aramaic language.
The Arameans never had a unified nation; they were divided into small independent kingdoms across parts of the
Near East, particularly in what is now modern Syria. After the
Bronze Age collapse, their political influence was confined to a number of
Syro-Hittite states, which were entirely absorbed into the
Neo-Assyrian Empire by the
8th century BC.
By contrast, the
Aramaic language came to be the lingua franca of the entire
Fertile Crescent, by
Late Antiquity developing into the literary languages such as
Syriac and
Mandaic.
Scholars have used the term "Aramaization" for the process by which the Assyro-Babylonian Akkadian-speaking peoples became Aramaic-speaking during the later Iron Age.
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Adnanites
According to
Islamic tradition, the Adnanites are "
Arabized Arabs", descended from
Adnan.They were from the northern, central and western
Arabia, as opposed to the
Qahtanites of southern and south eastern Arabia who were of pure Arabic stock. According to modern historians, the traditional distinction between Adnanites and Qahtanites lacks evidence and may have developed out of the later faction-fighting during the
Umayyad period.