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Canaan; Canaanites
ka'-nan, ka'-nan-its (kena'an; Chanaan):
1. Geography 2. Meaning of the Name 3. The Results of
Recent Excavations 4. History (1) Stone Age (2) Bronze Age (3)
A Babylonian Province (4) Jerusalem Founded (5) The Hyksos (6)
Egyptian Conquest (7) Tell el-Amarna Tablets 5. The Israelitsh
Invasion 6. Culture 7. Art 8. Commerce 9. Art of Writing
Canaan is stated in Gen. 10:6 to have been a son of Ham and
brother of Mizraim, or Egypt. This indicates the Mosaic period when the
conquerors of the XVIIIth and XIXth Egyptian Dynasties made Canaan for a time a
province of the Egyptian empire. Under the Pharaoh Meneptah, at the time of the
Exodus, it ceased to be connected with Egypt, and the Egyptian garrisons in the
South of the country were expelled by the Philistines, who probably made
themselves masters of the larger portion of it, thus causing the name of
Philistia or Palestine to become synonymous with that of Canaan (see Zep. 2:5).
In the Tell el-Amarna Letters, Canaan is written Kinakhna and Kinakhkhi. The
latter form corresponds with the Greek (Chna), a name given to Phoenicia
(Hecat. Fragments 254; Eusebius, praep. Ev., i.10; ix.17).
1. Geography:
In Num. 13:29 the Canaanites are described as dwelling "by the
sea, and along by the side of the Jordan," i.e. in the lowlands of Palestine.
The name was confined to the country West of the Jordan (Num. 33:51; Jos.
22:9), and was especially applied to Phoenicia (Isa. 23:11; compare Mat.
15:22). Hence, Sidon is called the "firstborn" of Canaan (Gen. 10:15, though
compare Jdg. 3:3), and the Septuagint translates "Canaanites" by "Phoenicians"
and "Canaan" by the "land of the Phoenicians" (Exo. 16:35; Jos. 5:12).
Kinakhkhi is used in the same restricted sense in the Tell el-Amarna Letters,
but it is also extended so as to include Palestine generally. On the other
hand, on the Egyptian monuments Seti I calls a town in the extreme South of
Palestine "the city of Pa-Kana'na" or "the Canaan," which Conder identifies
with the modern Khurbet Kenan near Hebron.
As in the Tell el-Amarna Letters, so in the Old Testament, Canaan
is used in an extended sense to denote the whole of Palestine West of the
Jordan (Gen. 12:5; Gen. 23:2, Gen. 23:19; Gen. 28:1; Gen. 31:18; Gen. 35:6;
Gen. 36:2; Gen. 37:1; Gen. 48:7; Exo. 15:15; Num. 13:2; Jos. 14:1; Jos. 21:2;
Psa. 135:11). Thus, Jerusalem which had Amorite and Hittite founders is stated
to be of "the land of the Canaanite" (Eze. 16:3), and (Isa. 19:18) terms
Hebrew, which was shared by the Israelites with the Phoenicians and,
apparently, also the Amorites, "the language of Caaan." Jabin is called "the
king of Canaan" in Jdg. 4:2, Jdg. 4:23-24; but whether the name is employed
here in a restricted or extended sense is uncertain.
2. Meaning of the Name:
As the Phoenicians were famous as traders, it has been supposed
that the name "Canaanite" is a synonym of "merchant" in certain passages of the
Old Testament. The pursuit of trade, however, was characteristic only of the
maritime cities of Phoenicia, not of the Canaanitish towns conquered the
Israelites. In Isa. 23:11 we should translate "Canaan" (as the Septuagint)
instead of "merchant city" (the King James Version); in Hos. 12:7 (8), "as, for
Canaan" (Septuagint), instead of "he is a merchant" (the King James Version);
in Zep. 1:11, "people of Canaan" (Septuagint), instead of "merchant people"
(the King James Version); on the other hand, "Canaanite" seems to have acquired
the sense of "merchant," as "Chaldean" did of "astrologer," in Isa. 23:8, and
Pro. 31:24, though probably not in Zec. 14:21, and Job. 41:6 (Hebrew 40:30).
3. The Results of Recent Excavation:
Much light has been thrown upon the history of Canaan prior to the
Israelite occupation by recent excavation, supplemented by the monuments of
Babylonia and Egypt. The Palestine Exploration led the way by its excavations
in 1890-92 at Tell el-Hesy, which turned out to be the site of Lachish, first
under Professor Flinders Petrie and then under Dr. Bliss. Professor Petrie laid
the foundations of Palestine archaeology by fixing the chronological sequence
of the Lachish pottery, and tracing the remains of six successive cities, the
fourth of which was that founded by the Israelites. Between it and the
preceding city was a layer of ashes, marking the period when the town lay
desolate and uninhabited. The excavations at Lachish were followed by others at
Tell es-Safi, the supposed site of Gath; at Tell Sandahanna, the ancient
Marissa, a mile South of Bet Jibrin, where interesting relics of the Greek
period were found, and at Jerusalem, where an attempt was made to trace the
city walls. Next to Lachish, the most fruitful excavations have been at Gezer,
which has been explored by Mr. Macalister with scientific thoroughness and
skill, and where a large necropolis has been discovered as well as the remains
of seven successive settlements, the last of which comes down to the Seleucid
era, the third corresponding with the first settlement at Lachish. The two
first settlements go back to the neolithic age. With the third the Semitic or
"Amorite" period of Canaan begins; bronze makes its appearance; high-places
formed of monoliths are erected, and inhumation of the dead is introduced,
while the cities are surrounded with great walls of stone. While Mr. Macalister
has been working at Gezer, German and Austrian expeditions under Dr. Schumacher
have been excavating at Tell em-Mutesellim, the site of Megiddo, and under Dr.
Sellin first at Tell Taanak, the ancient Taanach, and then at Jericho. At
Taanach cuneiform tablets of the Mosaic age were found in the house of the
governor of the town; at Samaria and Gezer cuneiform tablets have also been
found, but they belong to the late Assyrian and Babylonian periods. At Jericho,
on the fiat roof of a house adjoining the wall of the Canaanitish city,
destroyed by the Israelites, a number of clay tablets were discovered laid out
to dry before being inscribed with cuneiform characters. Before the letters
were written and dispatched, however, the town, it seems, was captured and
burnt. An American expedition, under Dr. Reisner, is now exploring Sebastiyeh
(Samaria), where the ruins of Ahab's palace, with early Hebrew inscriptions,
have been brought to light, as well as a great city wall built in the age of
Nebuchadrezzar.
4. History:
(1) Stone Age.
The history of Canaan begins with the paleolithic age, paleolithic
implements having been found in the lowlands. Our first knowledge of its
population dates from the neolithic period. The neolithic inhabitants of Gezer
were of short stature (about 5 ft. 4 inches in height), and lived in caves--at
least in the time of the first prehistoric settlement--and burned their dead.
Their sacred place was a double cave with which cup-marks in the rock were
connected, and their pottery was rude; some of it was ornamented with streaks
of red or black on a yellow or red wash. In the time of the second settlement a
rude stone wall was built around the town. The debris of the two neolithic
settlements is as much as 12 ft. in depth, implying a long period of
accumulation.
(2) Bronze Age.
The neolithic population was succeeded by one of Semitic type,
which introduced the use of metal, and buried its dead. The name of Amorite has
been given to it, this being the name under which the Semitic population of
Canaan was known to the Babylonians. Gezer was surrounded by a great wall of
stone intersected by brick towers; at Lachish the Amorite wall was of crude
brick, nearly 29 ft. in thickness (compare Deu. 1:28). A "high-place" was
erected at Gezer consisting of 9 monoliths, running from North to South, and
surrounded by a platform of large stones. The second monolith has been polished
by the kisses of the worshippers; the seventh was brought from a distance.
Under the pavement of the sanctuary lay the bones of children, more rarely of
adults, who had been sacrificed and sometimes burnt, and the remains deposited
in jars. Similar evidences of human sacrifice were met with under the walls of
houses both here and at Taanach and Megiddo. In the Israelite strata the
food-bowl and lamp for lighting the dead in the other world are retained, but
all trace of human sacrifice is gone. At Lachish in Israelite times the bowl
and lamp were filled with sand. The second "Amorite" city at Gezer had a long
existence. The high-place was enlarged, and an Egyptian of the age of the XIIth
Dynasty was buried within its precincts. Egyptian scarabs of the XIIth and
XIIIth Dynasties are now met with; these give place to scarabs of the Hyksos
period, and finally to those of the XVIIIth Dynasty (1600 BC). Hittite painted
pottery of Cappadocian type is also found in the later debris of the city as
well as seal-cylinders of the Babylonian pattern.
(3) A Babylonian Province.
Meanwhile Canaan had for a time formed part of the Babylonian
empire. Gudea, viceroy of Lagas under the kings of the Dynasty of Ur (2500 BC),
had brought "limestone" from the "land of the Amorites," alabaster from Mt.
Lebanon, cedar-beams from Amanus, and golddust from the desert between
Palestine and Egypt. A cadastral survey was drawn up about the same time by
Uru-malik, "the governor of the land of the Amorites," the name by which Syria
and Canaan were known to the Babylonians, and colonies of "Amorites" engaged in
trade were settled in the cities of Babylonia. After the fall of the Dynasty of
Ur, Babylonia was itself conquered by the Amorites who founded the dynasty to
which Khammurabi, the Amraphel of Gen. 14:1, belonged. In an inscription found
near Diarbekir the only title given to Khammu-rabi is "king of the land of the
Amorites." Babylonian now became the official, literary and commercial language
of Canaan, and schools were established there in which the cuneiform script was
taught. Canaanitish culture became wholly Babylonian; even its theology and
gods were derived from Babylonia. The famous legal code of Khammu-rabi was
enforced in Canaan as in other parts of the empire, and traces of its
provisions are found in Gen. Abram's adoption of his slave Eliezer, Sarai's
conduct to Hagar, and Rebekah's receipt of a dowry from the father of the
bridegroom are examples of this. So, too, the sale of the cave of Machpelah was
in accordance with the Babylonian legal forms of the Khammu-rabi age. The petty
kings of Canaan paid tribute to their Babylonian suzerain, and Babylonian
officials and "commerical travelers" (damgari) frequented the country.
(4) Jerusalem Founded.
We must ascribe to this period the foundation of Jerusalem, which
bears a Babylonian name (Uru-Salim, "the city of Salim"), and commanded the
road to the naphtha springs of the Dead-Sea. Bitumen was one of the most
important articles of Babylonian trade on account of its employment for
building and lighting purposes, and seems to have been a government monopoly.
Hence, the rebellion of the Canaanitish princes in the naphtha district (Gen.
14) was sufficiently serious to require a considerable force for its
suppression.
(5) The Hyksos.
The Amorite dynasty in Babylonia was overthrown by a Hittite
invasion, and Babylonian authority in Canaan came to an end, though the
influence of Babylonian culture continued undiminished. In the North the
Hittites were dominant; in the South, where Egyptian influence had been
powerful since the age of the XIIth Dynasty, the Hyksos conquest of Egypt
united Palestine with the Delta. The Hyksos kings bear Canaanitish names, and
their invasion of Egypt probably formed part of that general movement which led
to the establishment of an "Amorite" dynasty in Babylonia. Egypt now became an
appanage of Canaan, with its capital, accordingly, near its Asiatic frontier.
One of the Hyksos kings bears the characteristically Canaanitish name of
Jacob-el, written in the same way as on Babylonian tablets of the age of
Khammu-rabi, and a place of the same name is mentioned by Thothmes III as
existing in southern Palestine
(6) Egyptian Conquest.
The Pharaohs of the XVIIIth Dynasty expelled the Hyksos and
conquered Palestine and Syria. For about 200 years Canaan was an Egyptian
province. With the Egyptian conquest the history of the second Amorite city at
Gezer comes to an end. The old wall was partially destroyed, doubtless by
Thothmes III (about 1480 BC). A third Amorite city now grew up, with a larger
and stronger wall, 14 ft. thick. The houses built on the site of the towers of
the first wall were filled with scarabs and other relics of the reign of
Amon-hotep III (1440 BC). At Lachish the ruins of the third city were full of
similar remains, and among them was a cuneiform tablet referring to a governor
of Lachish mentioned in the Tell el-Amarna Letters. At Taanach cuneiform
tablets of the same age have been discovered, written by Canaanites to one
another but all in the Babylonian script and language.
(7) Tell el-Amarna Tablets.
In the Tell el-Amarna Letters we have a picture of Canaan at the
moment when the Asiatic empire of Egypt was breaking up through the religious
and social troubles that marked the reign of Amon-hotep IV. The Hittites were
attacking it in the North; in the South of Canaan the Khabiri or "confederate"
bands of free-lances were acquiring principalities for themselves. The petty
kings and governors had foreign troops in their pay with which they fought one
against the other; and their mercenaries readily transferred their allegiance
from one paymaster to another, or seized the city they were engaged to defend.
Hittites, Mitannians from Mesopotamia, and other foreigners appear as governors
of the towns; the Egyptian government was too weak to depose them and was
content if they professed themselves loyal. At times the Canaanitish princes
intrigued with the Assyrians against their Egyptian masters; at other times
with the Mitannians of "Aram-Naharaim" or the Hittites of Cappadocia. The
troops sent by the Egyptian Pharaoh were insufficient to suppress the
rebellion, and the authority of the Egyptian commissioners grew less and less.
Eventually the king of the Amorites was compelled to pass openly over to the
Hittite king, and Canaan was lost to the Pharaohs.
5. The Israelite Invasion:
Gaza and the neighboring towns, however, still remained in their
hands, and with the recovery of Egyptian power under the XIXth Dynasty allowed
Seti I to march once more into Canaan and reduce it again to subjection. In
spite of Hittite attacks the country on both sides of the Jordan acknowledged
the rule of Seti and his son Ramses II, and in the 21st year of the latter
Pharaoh the long war with the Hittites came to an end, a treaty being made
which fixed the Egyptian frontier pretty much where the Israelite frontier
afterward ran. A work, known as The Travels of the Mohar, which satirizes the
misadventures of a tourist in Canaan, gives a picture of Canaan in the days of
Ramses II. With the death of Ramses II Egyptian rule in Palestine came finally
to an end. The Philistines drove the Egyptian garrisons from the cities which
commanded the military road through Canaan, and the long war with the Hittites
exhausted the inland towns, so that they made but a feeble resistance to the
Israelites who assailed them shortly afterward. The Egyptians, however, never
relinquished their claim to be masters of Canaan, and when the Philistines
power had been overthrown by David we find the Egyptian king again marching
northward and capturing Gezer (1Ki. 9:16). Meanwhile the counry had become to a
large extent Israelite. In the earlier days of the Israelite invasion the
Canaanitish towns had been destroyed and the people massacred; later the two
peoples intermarried, and a mixed race was the result. The portraits
accompanying the names of the places taken by Shishak in southern Palestine
have Amorite features, and the modern fellahin of Palestine are Canaanite
rather than Jewish in type.
6. Culture:
Canaanitish culture was based on that of Babylonia, and begins
with the introduction of the use of copper and bronze. When Canaan became a
Babylonian province, it naturally shared in the civilization of the ruling
power. The religious beliefs and deities of Babylonia were superimposed upon
those of the primitive Canaanite. The local Baal or "lord" of the soil made way
for the "lord of heaven," the Sun-god of the Babylonians. The "high-place"
gradually became a temple built after a Babylonian fashion. The sacred stone,
once the supreme object of Canaanitish worship, was transformed into a Beth-el
or shrine of an indwelling god. The gods and goddesses of Babylonia migrated to
Canaan; places received their names from Nebo or Nin-ip; Hadad became Amurru
"the Amorite god"; Ishtar passed into Ashtoreth, and Asirtu, the female
counterpart of Asir, the national god of Assyria, became Asherah, while her
sanctuary, which in Assyria was a temple, was identified in Canaan with the old
fetish of an upright stone or log. But human sacrifice, and more especially the
sacrifice of the firstborn son, of which we find few traces in Babylonia,
continued to be practiced with undiminished frequency until, as we learn from
the excavations, the Israelite conquest brought about its suppression. The
human victim is also absent from the later sacrificial tariffs of Carthage and
Marseilles, its place being taken in them by the ram. According to these
tariffs the sacrifices and offerings were of two kinds, the zau'at or sin
offering and the shelem or thank-offering. The sin offering was given wholly to
the god; part of the thank-offering would be taken by the offerer. Birds which
were not allowed as a sin offering might constitute a thank-offering. Besides
the sacrifices, there were also offerings of corn, wine, fruit and oil.
7. Art:
What primitive Canaanitish art was like may be seen from the rude
sculptures in the Wadi el-Kana near Tyre. Under Babylonian influence it rapidly
developed. Among the Canaanite spoil captured by Thothmes III were tables,
chairs and staves of cedar and ebony inlaid with gold or simply gilded, richly
embroidered robes, chariots chased with silver, iron tent poles studded with
precious stones, "bowls with goats' heads on them, and one with a lion's head,
the workmanship of the land of Zahi" (the Phoenician coast), iron armor with
gold inlay, and rings of gold and silver that were used as money. At Taanach,
gold and silver ornaments have been found of high artistic merit. To the
Israelites, fresh from the desert, the life of the wealthy Canaanite would have
appeared luxurious in the extreme.
8. Commerce:
The position of Canaan made it the meeting-place of the commercial
routes of the ancient world. The fleets of the Phoenician cities are celebrated
in the Tell el-Amarna Letters, and it is probable that they were already
engaged in the purple trade. The inland towns of Canaan depended not only on
agriculture but also on a carrying trade: caravans as well as "commercial
travelers" (damgari) came to them from Cappadocia, Babylonia and Egypt. Bronze,
silver, lead, and painted ware were brought from Asia Minor, together with
horses; naphtha was exported to Babylonia in return for embroidered stuffs;
copper came from Cyprus, richly chased vessels of the precious metals from
Crete and corn from Egypt. Baltic amber has been found at Lachish, where a
furnace with iron slag, discovered in the third Amorite city, shows that the
native iron was worked before the age of the Israelite conquest. The
manufacture of glass goes back to the same epoch. As far back as 2500 BC,
alabaster and limestone had been sent to Babylonia from the quarries of the
Lebanon.
9. Art of Writing:
Long before the age of Abraham the Babylonian seal-cylinder had
become known and been imitated in Syria and Canaan. But it was not until Canaan
had been made a Babylonian province under the Khammu-rabi dynasty that the
cuneiform system of writing was introduced together with the Babylonian
language and literature. Henceforward, schools were established and libraries
or archive-chambers formed where the foreign language and its complicated
syllabary could be taught and stored. In the Mosaic age the Taanach tablets
show that the inhabitants of a small country town could correspond with one
another on local matters in the foreign language and script, and two of the
Tell el-Amarna letters are from a Canaanitish lady. The official notices of the
name by which each year was known in Babylonia were sent to Canaan as to other
provinces of the Babylonian empire in the cuneiform script; one of these, dated
in the reign of Khammurabi's successor, has been found in the Lebanon.
A. H. Sayce |