'Caphtor' (
Hebrew: כפתור) is a locality mentioned in the
Book of Amos, 9.7: "Have not I brought up Israel out of the land of Egypt? and the Philistines from Caphtor, and the Syrians from Kir?." It is named as the place of origin of the
Caphtorites, said in Genesis 10:13-14 to descend from Ham's son
Mizraim (Egypt).
The Aramaic
Targums translate the name as "Caphutkia" that is
Pelusium. This identification is also made by
Benjamin of Tudela who wrote that "Damiata" (the name for Pelusium in his day) was Caphtor.
[1]. The
Septuagint translates it as "Kappadokias" and similarly the
Vulgate renders it as "Cappadocia" which are understood to refer to the same location. Nevertheless, the seventeenth-century scholar
Samuel Bochart[2] understood these to be references to
Cappadocia in Anatolia. Modern commentators and translators commonly identify it with
Crete (Hertz 1936) although it has also been linked to
Cyprus, and the nearby coasts of
Anatolia. By some accounts, both Cyprus and Crete together were known as "the isles of the Caphtorim".
The name has been compared to
Egyptian 'Keftiu' and
Akkadian 'Kaptara' (a term found in the
Mari tablets). The name ''keftiu'' is found written in hieroglyphics in the
temple of Kom Ombo in
Upper Egypt and possibly in the Egyptian tomb of
Rekhmire.
The 'Caphtorites' (or 'Caphtorim') were a people first mentioned in Genesis 10:13-14 in the
Table of Nations which lists them as a descendant of
Mizraim thereby making them an Egyptian people.
Deuteronomy 2:23 records that the Caphtorites came from Caphtor, destroyed the
Avvites and usurped their land. The
Talmud (''Chullin 60b'') notes that the Avvites were the original
Philistine people in the days of Abraham while the Philistines of later times were descended from the conquering Caphtorites. This accords with Genesis 10:13 which lists the Philistines as a distinct people to the Caphtorites while Jeremiah 47:4 and Amos 9:7, set in a much later period, speak instead of Philistines having come from Caphtor.
The name ''Caphtor'' is identical to the Biblical Hebrew word for a knob-like structure
[3].
''Keftiu and its location
The
Egyptian cognate 'Keftiu' is attested in numerous inscriptions.
[4] The identity of Semitic ''Caphtor'' and Egyptian ''Keftiu'' is of long standing. The original thesis, that Keftiu corresponded to Caphtor, and that Caphtor was to be identified with Cyprus or Syria,
[5] shifted to an association with Crete under the influence of
Sir Arthur Evans. It was effectively criticised in 1931 by G. A. Wainwright, who located ''Keftiu'' in
Cilicia, on the Mediterranean shore of
Asia Minor,
[6] and drew together evidence from a wide variety of sources: in geographical lists and the inscription of
Tutmose III's "Hymn of Victory",
[7] where the place of ''Keftiu'' in lists is among recognizable regions in the northwesternmost corner of the Mediterranean, in the text of the "Keftiuan spell" ''śntkppwymntrkkr'', of ca 1200 BC,
[8] in which Cilician and Syrian deities Sanda
[9] Tarku and
Kubaba have been detected,
[10] in personal names associated in texts with ''Keftiu'' and in Tutmose's "silver
shawabty vessel of the work of Keftiu" and vessels of iron, which were received as gifts from Tinay in northern Syria. In 1980 J. Strange drew together the most complete collection of documents that mention ''Caphtor'' or ''Keftiu''. His examination showed conclusively that ''Keftiu'' could not be identified with Crete, for crucial texts dissociate ''Keftiu'' from "the Islands in the Middle of the Sea", by which Egyptian scribes denoted Crete. Strange made a painstaking argument that ''Keftiu'' correspondes geographically with Cyprus.
Notes
1. The New John Gill Exposition of the Entire Bible, Amos 9:7
2. ''Geographia Sacra seu Phaleg et Canaan'' (Caen 1646) l. 4. c. 32. [1].
3. Exodus 37:17
4. J. Strange, ''Caphtor/Keftiu: A New Investigation'' (Leiden: Brill) 1980, has brought together all the attestations for ''Caphtor'' and ''Keftiu''.
5. Steindorf 1893; W. Max Müller 1893; the history of the locating of Keftiu is set out briefly in Wainwright 1952:206f.
6. Wainwight, "Keftiu: Crete or Cilicia?" ''The Journal of Hellenic Studies'' '51' (1931); in response to critics who shifted the locale to the mainland of Greece, Wainwright assembled his various interlocking published arguments and summarised them in "Asiatic Keftiu" ''American Journal of Archaeology'' '56'.4 (October 1952), pp. 196-212.
7. Text in Breasted, ''Ancient Records of Egypt'' II, 659-60.
8. The spell is a rosary of divine names according to Gordon (''JEA'' '18' (1932) pp 67f.)
9. A deity that occurs in Luwian contexts, in theophoric names in Hittite texts and at Ugarit and Alalakh, and later in Greek ''Sandos'', in Lycian and Cilician contexts, according to Albrecht Goetze, "The Linguistic continuity of Anatolia as shown by its proper names" ''Journal of Cuneiform Studies'' '8'.2 (1954, pp. 74-81) p. 78.
10. Wainwight 1952:199.
References
★ Hertz J.H. (1936) The Pentateuch and Haftoras. Deuteronomy. Oxford University Press, London.
★ Strange, J. ''Caphtor/Keftiu: A New Investigation'' (Leiden: Brill) 1980. Reviewed by J.T. Hooker, ''The Journal of Hellenic Studies'' '103' (1983), p. 216.
★
Deuteronomy 2:23
★
Book of Jeremiah 47:4
★
Book of Amos 9:7
External links
★
Who Were the Keftiu?
See also
★
Philistines
★
Avvites