The 'Pre-history of the Southern Levant' explains the various cultural changes that occurred, as revealed by archaeological evidence, prior to recorded traditions in the area of the
Southern Levant, also referred to by a number of other largely overlapping historical designations, including
Canaan, the
Land of Israel (''Eretz Israel''), and
Palestine. The article also discusses how the pre-historic period was viewed in early traditions regarding the region.
Cultures
Mousterian Neanderthals appear as the earliest human inhabitants of the region. They have been estimated to date to about 200,000 BCE.
The first anatomically-modern humans to live in the area are called the
Kebarans. They have been conventionally dated to about 18,000 - 10,500 BCE, but recent paleoanthropological evidence suggests that Kebarans may have arrived as early as 75,000 BCE and shared the region with the
Neanderthals for millennia before the latter died out. They were followed by the
Natufian culture (c. 10,500 BCE - 8500 BCE), the
Yarmukians (c. 8500 - 4300 BCE) and the
Ghassulians (carbon dated c. 4300 - 3300 BCE). None of these names appears in any pre-modern source; they were all devised as conventions in recent times by archaeologists to refer to the various cultures found in archaeological strata. (See also: ''
History of pottery in the Southern Levant'').
The Ghassulian period created the basis of the Mediterranean economy which has characterised the area ever since. A
Chalcolithic culture, the Ghassulian economy was a mixed agricultural system consisting of extensive cultivation of grains (wheat and barley), intensive
horticulture of vegetable crops, commercial production of vines and olives, and a combination of
transhumance and
nomadic pastoralism. The Gassulian culture, according to
Juris Yarins, developed out of the earlier
Minhata phase of what he calls the ''"circum Arabian nomadic pastoral complex"'', probably associated with the first appearance of
Semites in this area.
Geographically the area is divided between a coastal plain, hill country to the East and the Jordan Valley joining the Sea of Galilee to the Dead Sea. Rainfall decreases from the north to the south, with the result that the northern region of Israel has generally been more economically developed than the southern one of Judah.
The Ghassulian period was associated with increasing
urbanization, where people may have begun living in small
city-states, one of which was
Jericho. The area's location at the center of three
trade routes linking three continents made it the meeting place for religious and cultural influences from
Egypt,
Syria,
Mesopotamia, and
Asia Minor:
# A Coastal Route: connecting
Gaza and the
Philistine coast north to
Joppa and
Megiddo, travelling north through
Byblos to
Phoenicia and
Anatolia.
# A Hill Route: travelling through the
Negev,
Kadesh Barnea, to
Hebron and
Jerusalem, and thence north to
Samaria,
Sechem,
Shiloh,
Beth Shean and
Hazor, and thence to
Kadesh and
Damascus.
# The "Kings Highway": travelling north from
Eilat, east of the Jordan through
Amman to
Damascus, and connected to the "
frankincense road" north from
Yemen and South Arabia.
The area seems to have suffered from acute periods of desiccation, and reduced rainfall which has influenced the relative importance of settled versus nomadic ways of living. The cycle seems to have been repeated a number of times during which a reduced rainfall increases periods of fallow, with farmers spending increasing amounts of time with their flocks and away from cultivation. Eventually they revert to fully nomadic cultures, which, when rainfall increases settle around important sources of water and begin to spend increasing amounts of time on cultivation. The increased prosperity leads to a revival of inter-regional and eventually international trade. The growth of villages rapidly proceeds to increased prosperity of market towns and city states, which attract the attention of neighbouring great powers, who may invade to capture control of regional trade networks and possibilities for tribute and taxation. Warfare leads to opening the region to pandemics, with resultant depopulation, overuse of fragile soils and a reversion to nomadic pastoralism.
Early and Middle Bronze Age
The urban development of Canaan lagged considerably behind that of Egypt and Mesopotamia and even that of Syria, where from 3,500 BCE a sizable city developed at
Hamoukar. This city, which was conquered, probably by people coming from the Southern Iraqi city of
Uruk, saw the first connections between Syria and Southern Iraq that some
[Bright, John (2000)"A History of Israel" (John Knox Press Westminister)][1] have suggested lie behind the patriarchal traditions. Urban development again began culminating in the
Early Bronze Age development of sites like
Ebla, which by 2,300 BCE was incorporated once again into an Empire of
Sargon, and then
Naram-Sin of
Akkad (Biblical Accad). The archives of Ebla show reference to a number of Biblical sites, including
Hazor,
Jerusalem, and a number of people have claimed, also to
Sodom and Gomorrah, mentioned in the patriarchal records. The collapse of the Akkadian Empire, saw the arrival of peoples using Khirbet Kerak Ware pottery,
[2] coming originally from the
Zagros Mountains, east of the
Tigris. It is suspected by some
[2] that this event marks the arrival in Syria and Palestine of the
Hurrians, people later known in the Biblical tradition possibly as
Horites.
The following
Middle Bronze Age period was initiated by the arrival of "
Amorites" from Syria in Southern Iraq, an event which people like Albright (above) associated with the arrival of Abraham's family in Ur. This period saw the pinnacle of urban development in the area of Syria, Israel and Palestine. Archaeologists show that the chief state at this time was the city of
Hazor, which may have been the capital of the region of Israel. This is also the period in which Semites began to appear in larger numbers in the Nile delta region of Egypt. For some time it was felt that the portrayal of the tomb of
Beni Hasan showed evidence for the story of Joseph's "Coat of Many Colours".
Traditions
This region was also the natural battleground for the great powers of the region and subject to domination by adjacent
empires, beginning with Egypt in the late
3rd millennium BCE. Traditions regarding the period found in works such as the
Book of Jubilees, the ''
Kebra Nagast'' and commentaries of
Rashi,
Philo and the ''Sepher Hayashar'' of
Ibn Ezra refer to the early inhabitants as the sons of
Shem and speak of an invasion by the people known as
Canaanites descended from
Ham who is also the father of Mizraim representing Egypt.
The
Book of Jubilees, states that the land was originally allotted to Shem and
Arphaxad (ancestor of the Hebrews) when it was still vacant, but was wrongfully occupied by Canaan and his son
Sidon. The ''
Kebra Nagast'' (1225 CE) records oral traditions of the Canaanites invading existing cities of Shem, and
Ibn Ezra (1167 CE) similarly noted that they had seized land from earlier inhabitants.
Rashi mentions that the Canaanites were seizing land from the sons of Shem in the days of Abraham, although it is unclear of where these medieval documents obtained this information. Perhaps it comes from the interpretation that a late Canaanite arrival is hinted at in
Genesis 12:6 where the expression "At that time the Canaanites were in the land" could be interpreted to carry the connotation of "then but not before" and not "then but not now" as Canaanites were present up and until the second Temple period by which time many argue that Genesis had certainly been written.
[3][4]
See also
★
History of pottery in the Southern Levant
★
Names of the Levant
★
History of the Levant
★
History of Palestine
★
History of ancient Israel and Judah
External links
★ Joel Ng,
Introduction to Biblical Archaeology 2: From Stone to Bronze
★ Paul James Cowie, Archaeowiki:
Archaeology of the Southern Levant - useful bibliographies