filisteos, toponimia e inmigracion, 2010
TRANSCRIPT
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introduction
substantial body of research focuses on the
origins of the Philistines, the scale of their
migration, and their status among the autoch-
thonic Canaanite population. Nowadays, most schol-
ars dealing with these subjects agree that the initial
phase of the Philistine culture has close affinities with
various regions in the Aegean and eastern Mediter-
ranean, and that the first Philistine settlers spoke an
Indo-European language (Yasur-Landau 2002: 243;
Finkelberg 2006: 11112). However, limited atten-
tion has been paid to the fact that at least four of the
five primary Philistine citiesAshkelon, Ashdod,Gath, and Ekronhave Semitic names.1 The name of
the fifth primary Philistine city, Gaza, is known from
historic records prior to the Philistine arrival, though
its meaning is unclear. Four of these toponyms areknown from Bronze Age historical sources, including
documents from Ugarit, as well as the Amarna letters
and other Egyptian records. One of the five cities,
Ekron, is mentioned in Iron Age documents. This pa-
per examines the influence of factors including migra-
tion, conquest, exile, and colonial and imperial rule
on the naming of sites settled by migrant populations
from diverse periods and cultures. The results of this
examination are applied to existing theories regarding
the Philistine settlement in the southern Levant in or-
der to gain understanding of their city location choice
and the reason for adopting certain toponyms. This
provides insight into Philistine migration and Philis-
tine interaction with the native Canaanite population.
philistine city names
Gaza
Neither the meaning of the name Gaza, nor its
root and form, are clear. This toponym first appears
in the Annals of Thutmose III from the Late Bronze
1 The only exception I noticed is Yasur-Landau (2002: 206,
243), who mentioned this phenomenon, using it as another indi-
cation that a substantial part of the Canaanite population remained
in the region after the Philistine settlement.
Understanding Philistine Migration: CityNames and Their Implications
Itzhaq Shai
Institute of Archaeology
Martin [Szusz] Department of Land of Israel Studies and Archaeology
Bar-Ilan University
Ramat Gan 52900, Israel
The origin of the Philistines, their quantity, quality, and status among the native Ca-
naanite population, have all been the focus of a substantial volume of research. However,
limited attention has been paid to the fact that at least four of the five primary Philistine
citiesAshkelon, Ashdod, Gath, and Ekronhave Semitic names. Four of these five topo-nyms are known from the Bronze Age historical sources (such as the documents from
Ugarit and the Amarna tablets and other Egyptian records), while the fifth (Ekron) is
mentioned in Iron Age documents. This paper examines the influence of various factors
(e.g., migration, conquest, exile, colonial and imperial rule) on the naming of sites settled
by immigrants from other periods and cultures. The results of this examination are then
applied to the existing theories regarding the settlement of the Philistines, in order to
investigate the choice of location of their cities and the reason for adoption of existing
toponyms by the immigrants.
A
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16 ITZHAQ SHAI BASOR 354
Age I, and again in documents dating to the 19th
and 20th Egyptian dynasties (Katzenstein 1992:
912). Deut 2:23 relates that Gaza was originally in-
habited by the Avvim, who were driven out by the
Caphtorim.2
Ashkelon
Ashkelon is a Semitic name, based on the root tql,
meaning to weigh (lq) (Cross and Freedman1964: 4849). The city name first appears in the Ex-
ecration Texts from the Middle Bronze Age (Esse
1992: 488).3 It later appears in the Amarna letters
(EA 320326, 370) and other Late Bronze Age Egyp-
tian documents. Like Ashdod (see below), the city
was probably named during the Middle Bronze Age
by Canaanites (although there are large Early Bronze
Age sites around Tell Ashkelon).
Ashdod
The first appearance of the town Ashdod is in
texts from Ugarit dating to the 13th century b.c.e.
(Cross and Freedman 1964: 49; M. Dothan 1992a:
477; Vidal 2006: 27273). These texts refer to mer-
chants from Ashdod4 who usually bear West Semitic
names (M. Dothan 1992a: 477). Cross and Freedman
(1964: 48) emphasized that the name Ashdod is Ca-
naanite, suggesting that it derives from the root tdd,
relating to the Old Akkadian sadadu, meaning to
measure. Recently, Gitler and Tal (2006) pointedout that the name appears as sdd(dd) on coins fromthe Persian period, without the alep at the beginning.This indicates that even as late as the Persian period,
the people of Ashdod were aware of the root of the
citys name. It seems that the original city name was
given by the Canaanites who established the site.
Naaman (1997: 61115) argued that the Ashdod
in the Ugaritic texts is not the Ashdod of southern
Israel. He identified the former with Enkomi, in Cy-
prus, arguing that Ashdod is not mentioned in any
Egyptian record of the Middle and Late Bronze
Ages.5 Naaman also highlighted that Tyre was the
most dominant eastern Mediterranean coast-harbor
mentioned in the Ugaritic texts, and it therefore seems
unreasonable that the people of Ashdod (in southern
Israel) would have appeared in Ugarit so often.6
Ac-cording to this reconstruction, the immigrants who
arrived in Ashdod in the 12th century b.c.e. came
from Enkomi and named their new city after their
place of origin (Naaman 1997: 612).
Naamans proposal is difficult to accept for a
number of reasons. First, if his hypothesis is true,
Ashdod would be the only city renamed by the Phi-
listines. Second, the word Ashdod is in the aqtal
grammatical form, which appears in several east
Mediterranean coastal city toponyms, such as Arwad
and Achshaph (Naaman 1997: 611). Third, and most
important, Ashdod is a West Semitic name, and the
people of Ashdod who were mentioned in the Ugarittexts are mostly of West Semitic origin (Naaman
1997: 61011). It is therefore unlikely that a Cypriot
site would have a West Semitic name, and that such
a site would be the source of the name Ashdod,
brought by a non-Semitic people in the Iron Age I.
Gath
The meaning of the term gt (tg) in West Semiticlanguages is winepress, and it is a relatively com-
mon place-name in the Bronze and Iron Ages in the
southern Levant (Schniedewind 1998: 7172). Thereis wide consensus in identifying Gath with Tell es-Safi
(Rainey 1975; Schniedewind 1998; Goren, Finkel-
stein, and Naaman 2004: 27980; Maeir 2004: 320
21). Based on the Amarna documents, Naaman (1997:
603, n. 2) believes that the name Gath was used for
this site already in the Late Bronze Age.
2 For identification of the Caphtorim and the Philistines in the
Bible, see T. Dothan 1982: 13, 2122; Shai in press a.3 Recently Ben-Tor (2006: for Ashkelon specifically, see p. 67
table 1) argued that the texts reflect the Early Bronze Age.4 Vidal (2006: 273, 27576) argued that the prominent role of
Ashdod in the Ugaritic texts reflects the importance of the city in
the trade between Ugarit and the southern Levantine coast.
5 For a different opinion, see M. Dothan 1992b, who explained
that because the site was part of Egypts territory, it was not men-
tioned in Egyptian documents.6 According to Goren, Finkelstein, and Naaman (2004: 292
94), two of the Amarna tablets (EA 294, EA 296) were sent fromthe site of Tel Ashdod. But since the city name is not mentioned
in these letters, Naaman suggested that the site was called Tianna
during the Late Bronze Age. Rainey (2003: 193*94*) refutes this
by pointing out that the place-name Tianna is absent from the
Amarna corpus, meaning that this could not have been the name
of the city, and therefore it is logical to assume that Tel Ashdod
was in fact named Ashdod during the Late Bronze Age.
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2009 UNDERSTANDING PHILISTINE MIGRATION 17
Ekron
In the Neo-Assyrian texts, this city name appears
as am-qa-(ar)ru-(na) (e.g., Millard 1965: 16; Frahm1997: 54; Rainey and Notley 2006: 242). In docu-
ments from the Hellenistic period, and in the Ono-masticon of Eusebius, it is named Accaron (Dothan
and Gitin 1992: 415; Gitin, Dothan, and Naveh 1997:
16). The root of this toponym is qr (rq[), meaning
to uproot. Although this city name does not appear
in documents predating the Iron Age II, it is clear
that this toponym is Semitic.
other philistine towns
In addition to the five major cities discussed above,
three secondary Philistine settlements are mentioned
in the Bible: Ziklag and Timnah are mentioned in texts
relating to the Iron Age I, and Yavneh is mentioned ina narrative dating to the Iron Age II.
Ziklag
Ziklag was listed as one of the 29 towns in the
Negev and was assigned to the tribe of Simeon (Josh
15:31; 19:5). During the reign of Saul, it was under
Philistine control, and Achish, the king of Gath, gave
it to David as a place of residence (1 Sam 27:6). The
origin of the name is uncertain and probably has no
meaning in any Semitic language (Ray 1986: 355
56). Ray argued that the etymology of the place-
name derived from t3 kl, meaning the man of Tskiel,one of the Sea People (Ray 1986: 35758). Most
scholars identify the town with Tel Sera (Oren 1993:
1329; Rainey and Notley 2006: 14849; Blakely
2007). According to Oren (1993: 1331), the site was
probably under Egyptian control during the first half
of the 12th century b.c.e., as attested by Egyptian
hieratic inscriptions and other Egyptian finds.
No traces of the first phase of Philistine pottery
assemblage (i.e., Mycenaean IIIC) were found at Tel
Sera. Nevertheless, Oren (1993: 1331) concluded
that Philistines inhabited the site during the entire
Iron Age. The location of the site, the finds datingto the Iron Age, and the biblical narrative all suggest
that Ziklag was a Philistine settlement, at least dur-
ing the Iron Age I. If one accepts Rays interpre-
tation, it could be that during the latter part of the
Iron Age I, when the Philistines settled new sites
such as Tel Sera, they might have given them non-
Semitic names, probably derived from their original
region and language. However, lacking any further
evidence regarding other Philistine sites (e.g., Tell
Qasile) and their names, this argument cannot be
supported or denied.
Timnah
Timnah is mentioned for the first time in extra-
biblical sources by Sennacherib in 701 b.c.e. (Luck-
enbill 1924: 3136). The site is identified with Tel
Batash (A. Mazar 1997b: 56). Based on Samsons
stories (Judg 1316) and on archaeological finds
from the site, it seems that the site was under Philis-
tine control during the Iron Age I (A. Mazar 1997b:
6, 254; 2006: 32829). The meaning of the name is
allotted or portion, and derives from the West
Semitic root hnm.
YavnehYavneh7 is mentioned as a Philistine city in the time
of Uzziah in the mid-eighth century b.c.e. (2 Chron
26:6). Due to its location, scholars identify the site
with Jabneel, a city on the western border of Judah
according to Josh 15:11 (but note that Ekron is also
mentioned in this verse as a Judahite site). Therefore,
the identification of the town as Philistine is not
entirely certain. The site is identified with the ruins
of an Arab village bearing the same name (Yebna).
The name is derived from the root hnb , meaning
to build or to create. It might be that during the
Bronze Age, this site (together with Yavneh-Yam)
was called Makhoz, which is mentioned in the Am-
arna letters, and by Thutmose III (14791425 b.c.e.).
From the Hellenistic period until the Crusader pe-
riod, it was known as Makhoz Yavneh (Mazar, Tur-
Sinai, and Yeivin 1958: 454).
summary of philistine toponyms
The etymology of the Philistine toponyms can be
summarized as follows. Except for Ekron, the other
four main Philistine cities were mentioned in textsdating to the Bronze Age, before Philistine settle-
ment. Except for Gaza, the names of the other four
7 For recent discoveries from a Philistine temple favissa at
Yavneh dating to the Iron Age II, see Kletter, Ziffer, and Zwickel
2006; Ziffer and Kletter 2007.
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18 ITZHAQ SHAI BASOR 354
main Philistine cities are of Semitic origin. Archae-
ological excavations show that Ashkelon and Gath
were established during the Early Bronze Age (Stager
2001; Uziel and Maeir 2005), and Ekron and Ashdod
were founded during the Middle Bronze Age (M. Do-
than 1971: 24; Bierling 1998). Hence, it seems thatthese cities were named long before the Philistines
arrival in the region, and that the Philistines used the
old Semitic names.8 As for the secondary towns, it
seems that the names Timnah and Yavneh are of
Semitic origin; the name Ziklag may have traces of
the Philistines original language.
philistine cities
in historical sources
Unfortunately, there are no Philistine written docu-
ments dating to the Iron Age I to testify by what
names the Philistines called their cities. However,
there are a few Egyptian records dating to this period
that mention Philistia and the Philistines. In the On-
omasticon of Amenemope,9 for example, three Phil-istine cities were mentioned by their pre-Philistine
names: Ashkelon, Ashdod, and Gaza. According to
Assyrian and Babylonian sources from the eighth to
sixth centuries b.c.e. (Tadmor 1966; Shai 2006: 356
58), the cities Gaza, Ashkelon, Ashdod, and Ekron
were known by their Semitic names. The dedication
inscription from Ekron (Gitin, Dothan, and Naveh
1997) confirms this conclusion.
continuity and change
in place-names
The renaming of cities is well documented in
the Bible, usually occurring when place ownership
changed (for example, the renaming of Kiriath-Arba
to Hebron in Gen 23:2; the renaming of Laish to Dan
in Judg 18:29; see also Eissfeldt 1968: 7071). This
is unlikely to have occurred with the five major Phil-
istine cities, since we do not have any sources that
testify to such renaming. Moreover, since the first
generation of Philistines did not speak a Semitic lan-
guage, one would expect that if they had changed the
names of their cities, they would have chosen non-
Semitic names.
A place-name has cultural value (Kadmon 1992:
377) and reflects a places linguistic, political, andcultural history (Rainey and Notley 2006: 14). To-
ponymy embraces geography, linguistics, and history,
and helps to reconstruct the ethnic, political, cultural,
and religious changes in a specific region over a long
period of time (Astour 1988: 545). Place-names can
also provide data regarding the environment and
human activity in the past (Taylor 2002; Wardini
2002: 87). For example, Gath, which means wine-
press, was likely a place where wine was pressed;
Ashdod and Ashkelon, which mean to measure
and to weigh, were probably involved in trade and
commerce.
Sometimes the name of a place is not given byits inhabitants, but by the people around it (Wardini
2002: 87). The origin of a place-name is not neces-
sarily a reflection of the language of its inhabitants,
since the name may be inherited from former inhabi-
tants who spoke a different language, or given by
neighboring populations (Wardini 2002: 88). Hence,
though a place-name may have continued through
ages and cultures, it does not necessarily indicate
that the origin of the residents remained constant,
nor does a place-name necessarily indicate the ori-
gin of the inhabitants.
The Philistines were not of Semitic origin, and
they probably conquered the Late Bronze Age cities
in which they settled as they migrated to the southern
Levant (Barako 2000: 52021). It is quite remark-
able, therefore, that they would have kept using the
original Semitic place-names.
To understand the Philistine paradigm, it may be
useful to compare other historical migrations of eth-
nic groups to new regions, and examine their renam-
ing of cities. An analysis of examples of stability and
change in place-names in Israel throughout history
points to three patterns. In Pattern 1, places keep
their names despite changes in the ruling class (for
example, Jaffa10
). In Pattern 2, places have short-term8 Lacking any Philistine documents from the Iron Age I, we do
not know what the Philistines called their cities. However, the
dedication inscription from Ekron indicates that during the sev-
enth century b.c.e., the Philistines called the city by its original
Semitic name, Ekron (Gitin, Dothan, and Naveh 1997).9 This document is usually dated to the Iron Age I (late 20th
dynasty); see Gardiner 1947: 25; T. Dothan 1982: 3; Yasur-Landau
2002: 212; Rainey and Notley 2006: 110.
10 Its name first appears in documents from the days of Pha-
raoh Thutmose III and then several times in the Amarna tablets.
Although the form of the name is not clear, it seems to be derived
from the root hpy, meaning beautiful and nice (Broshi 1958:
738). The city continues to bear this name throughout the Iron
Age, the Persian period, and onward.
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2009 UNDERSTANDING PHILISTINE MIGRATION 19
name changes (for example, Beth Shean11). In Pat-
tern 3, place-names are changed permanently, and
the original name is lost (for example, Aphek to An-
tipatris and later to Auja,12 Shechem to Neapolis,13
and Migdal Starton to Caesarea14). It is interesting to
note that often, when foreign, non-Semitic nameswere given to ancient places, these names did not
survive for a long time, and when the foreign power
left the area, the places reverted to their previous
Semitic name (Pattern 2). One might have expected
that the Philistines would rename their sites in their
language (Pattern 3) because they were newcomers
and non-Semitic. Since the Philistine cities were
called by their Semitic names, they actually belong
to Pattern 1 or 2.
naming patterns
of migrant groups
The Phoenician Colonies
Several finds and inscriptions indicate relations
between Cyprus and Phoenicia in the 11th and 10th
centuries b.c.e. (Aubet 2001: 5152). From the end
of the ninth century b.c.e., there is evidence of
Phoenician settlement in the southeastern part of Cy-
prus, especially with the foundation of Kition, the
first Phoenician colony, and one founded in an al-
ready existing town (Aubet 2001: 52).15 The Phoeni-
cian colonial cities were connected to a mother city
that could supply a significant source of outside prof-its. In addition, the colony provided the Phoeni-
cians with an open line of trade (Markoe 2000: 97).
In a dedication inscription dating to the middle of
the eighth century b.c.e., a Phoenician governor in
Cyprus mentioned the city Qart-hadasht (Carthage),
meaning new city. While Lipinski claimed (2004:
46) this refers to a new unidentified Phoenician city,
others (e.g., Tsirkin 1991: 122, n. 27; Markoe 2000:
17071; Aubet 2001: 52) identify the new city with
Kition.
Kition was the main Phoenician city in Cyprus
during the eighth and seventh centuries b.c.e. Its
biblical name is Citium, and it was mentioned inIsaiah 23. The last mention of Kition as Carthage is
by Ashurbanipal in 667 b.c.e. From the fifth century
b.c.e. onward, the city is called again by its old
name, Kition (Michaelidou-Nicolaou 1987: 33233).
According to Michaelidou-Nicolaou (1987: 333), the
change of place-name occurred at the end of the
seventh century b.c.e. when the city was no longer
dependent on Tyre (the mother city of Kition) and
became involved in inter-Cypriot politics. In the fifth
and fourth centuries b.c.e. a Phoenician dynasty
ruled in Kition (Michaelidou-Nicolaou 1987: 334).
This case represents a change in place-name by
newcomers (the Phoenicians). However, it seems
11 Stieglitz (1990: 87) suggested that Shean derived from
Suen, which is identified with Sin the moon god. The first mention
of the city may have been in the Execration Texts of the Middle
Bronze Age (but see also Ben-Tor 2006, which dated it earlier, tothe Early Bronze Age), and several times in other Egyptian texts
dating to the Late Bronze Age (A. Mazar 1997a: 305). At the end
of the tenth century b.c.e., Beth-Shean was captured by Pharaoh
Shishaq (number 16 in Shishaqs list; see, e.g., Rainey and Notley
2006: 186). During the Hellenistic period, Nysa Scythopolis be-
came its official name, although it was still called by its original
name (A. Mazar 1997a: 305). During the Early Arab period, the
city reverted to its original Semitic name, but according to its Ara-
bic form, Beisan (A. Mazar 1997a: 306).12 Aphek appeared for the first time in the Middle Bronze Age
in the Execration Texts (according Ben-Tor 2006, the texts should
be dated earlier, to the Old Kingdom) and is mentioned as one of
the cities conquered by the Pharaohs Thutmose III and Amenhotep
II (Shai in press b). In the Hellenistic period, the settlement on the
mound was called Pegae. When Herod the Great became king, he
rebuilt Aphek and named the city Antipatris in honor of his father,
Antipater. In the Early Arab period, the site was called Abu
Butrus; later in the period it was called Auja, after the Arabic
name of the Yarkon. The Ottoman Turks erected a fort here in
1572 c.e. as a cavalry base to guard an important road that passed
nearby. In keeping with the sites long-standing association with
water, they named the fort Binar Bashi, meaning head of the
spring (Beck and Kochavi 1993: 62).13 The ancient city of Shechem dates to the Middle Bronze
Age and is documented in the Execration Texts and other Egyp-
tians documents dating to the Middle (but see also Ben-Tor 2006
for an earlier dating for these texts) and Late Bronze Ages
(Toombs 1992: 1174 75). In 72 c.e., Titus established the city of
Flavia Neapolis, meaning new city of the emperor Flavius, a few
kilometers west of the ancient city of Shechem. The Madaba Mo-
saic Map followed the tradition that distinguished between Neap-olis and Shechem (Avi-Yonah 1954: 45). During the Arab period,
the city name was changed to Nablus, the Arabic pronunciation of
Neapolis. The Crusaders called the city Naples. It should be noted
that the ancient Bronze and Iron Age city is located a short dis-
tance from the city of Neapolis.14 Herod established two cities in honor of Augustus: Sebastia
and Caesarea. Caesarea was established in a Phoenician town
named Migdal Starton (Levin 1984: 49).
15 The beginning of the Phoenician settlements on Cyprus is
dated by some scholars to the second half of the tenth century
b.c.e. (Lipinski 2004: 42) or the mid-ninth century b.c.e. (Markoe
2000: 170).
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20 ITZHAQ SHAI BASOR 354
that although the formal name during the eighth
and first half of the seventh centuries b.c.e. was the
Phoenician name, the old name was still well known,
as evidenced by Isa 23:12, Jer 2:10, and the Arad
inscriptions (e.g., Aharoni 1975: 12, 14) where the
Kitim were mentioned. It was also the city name inthe fifth century b.c.e., and ongoing, probably by
the locals. Through the end of the eighth century
b.c.e., there was significant separate development in
Cyprus. On the one hand, there were Phoenicians,
as shown by the large number of Phoenician inscrip-
tions. On the other hand, there were locals, and they
used the syllabic writing system (from left to right),
contrary to the Phoenicians and their own Late
Bronze tradition (Sherratt 2003: 23536). Moreover,
the syllabic script in Cyprus was used only for
Greek, and only Semitic people used the Phoenician
script (Sherratt 2003: 234). It is thus clear that in the
particular case of the Phoenician colony in Cyprus,there was a distinct separation between the two eth-
nic groups.
Several sites in Crete had names that include the
prefix Phoinik.16 Since these places are located
along the coast, it seems reasonable to correlate the
toponyms with the Phoenician maritime trade and
colonial policy (Markoe 1998: 233, n. 3). Two other
sites in Crete may have been called by Semitic names,
Itanos and Korobios (Astour 1965: 14041; Markoe
1998: 236).
The earliest Phoenician colonies in the western
Mediterranean date to the beginning of the eighth
century b.c.e. (van Dommelen 2005: 118; Aubet
2006: 9596). In most cases, the settlements were
founded in previously unoccupied, isolated locations
on offshore islands and peninsulas (Boardman 2001:
38). The locations were selected according to topo-
graphic advantages. The new colonies continued
contact with their mother cities (Boardman 2001: 39;
van Dommelen 2005: 119), but usually the names of
the new cities were unknown.
The Greek Colonies
The Greek colonies in Sicily and southern Italyduring the eighth century b.c.e. were the result of
overpopulation on the Greek mainland and the out-
come of a joint venture with the Phoenicians (Tandy
1997: 29, 75, 22930). As opposed to the Phoenician
colonies (which were a by-product of Phoenician trade
activity), the Greeks established new sites in order to
begin new lives away from home (van Dommelen
2005: 121) or to create an aristocratic warrior ethos
(Crielaard 1995). These new settlements were notnecessarily in contact with their homeland. The word
the Greeks used to describe these settlements was
apoikia, meaning home away from home (Board-
man 2001: 34). The Greeks in the settlements made
a great effort to control sea routes, which means they
also had a trade interest (Tandy 1997: 7778).
A good example of the quest for land in ancient
Greece can be seen in the Cyrene settlement. This
site was on a plateau, and the surrounding towns were
located in the fertile coastal plain, indicating that the
sites location was chosen for its land, and not its
trading prospects (Boardman 1994: 143).
Although the background of Greek colonies dif-fers significantly from place to place (Boardman
1994: 147), various colonies share common causes,
such as the search for land. Although colonies may
have been founded in order to extend Greek culture,
this goal seems to have been quickly forgotten, and
the colonies soon began founding new cultures (Snod-
grass 1994: 910).
The Frankish Settlements
During the Frankish Kingdom in the Levant in the
12th and 13th centuries c.e., the majority of the
population in the region was Muslim (Kedar 2006:
129). There was a hierarchic settlement structure in
Frankish society (Ellenblum 1995). The Franks usu-
ally inhabited existing cities, such as Antioch, Tripoli,
Acre, and Jerusalem (Ellenblum 1999: 35).
Prawer (1987: 2829) suggested that Crusader
city plans were based on two separate traditions: the
ancient local tradition, and the Crusaders European
tradition. He argued that these populations did not
assimilate or acculturate, but rather lived side by
side. While it was once assumed that the Franks lived
only in cities, archaeological evidence shows that
there were also rural Frankish settlements (Ellen-blum 1999: 3536, fig. 2). The Franks preferred to
settle in regions inhabited by local Christians, and
in some cases, the two communities lived together in
the same place. The Franks avoided settling in rural
regions inhabited by Muslims (Ellenblum 1999: 38
39; Kedar 2006: 13738).16 For the list of these sites, see Markoe 1998: 23334.
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2009 UNDERSTANDING PHILISTINE MIGRATION 21
Names of cities in which the Crusaders lived that
had been previously inhabited usually stayed the
same after the arrival of the Crusaders (e.g., Acre).17
This situation is similar to the Philistine paradigm,
since both the Philistines and the Franks settled in
places that had already been urban centers.Similarly, the Franks established very few new
cities (Prawer 1987: 1213). Although it seems that
the Franks were the elite, they did integrate with local
Christian communities (Ellenblum 1999: 40; Talmon-
Heller 1999: 45), and the local Christians held the
majority of bureaucratic positions (Talmon-Heller
1999: 44). While the Franks needed the help and
knowledge of the locals, the locals saw the Franks as
a defense against potential threats (Ellenblum 1999:
39). In this aspect, therefore, Frankish settlements
differed from the Philistine paradigm, since the Franks
encountered a population with whom they shared a
religion.Contrary to their relationship with the local Chris-
tians, contact between the Crusaders and the local
Muslim population was very limited (Ellenblum 1999:
40; Talmon-Heller 1999: 4547; Kedar 2006: 138).
The New England Colonies
The commercial enterprise efforts to settle New
England failed, and in 1617, the Pilgrim Society of
Leyden decided to establish a Puritan state in Amer-
ica (Fiske 1892: 79). Colonial New England lacked
ethnic variety, and during the first wave of emigra-
tion, about 1,000 English men, women, and children
arrived in New England, America (McManis 1975:
24, 36).
The immigrants wanted to preserve their En-
glish culture while practicing a religion that could
not be worshiped in England (McManis 1975: 25
26). Throughout the 17th century, new settlements
were established in New England. Most of these
were named after places in old England (e.g.,
New Hampshire, New Haven, and New London),
or given names with English meaning (e.g., Cam-bridge, Charlestown, Dorchester, and Norwich).
Urbanism was a vital part of New Englands char-
acter from the beginning of its settlement (McManis
1975: 72). In the economic stage of traditional society,
the settlers adopted select Native American foods
and methods of cultivation and began utilizing unfa-
miliar raw materials (McManis 1975: 8687).
The New England paradigm, then, was similar to
the Philistine paradigm, in that it included one eth-
nic group composed of men, women, and children
who lived in urban centers. Unlike the Philistines,
however, these immigrants arrived in an unurban-
ized region and established new places and cities.They named the new places after places from their
homeland and maintained contact with their place
of origin.
discussion
The examples described above provide a basis
for examining and defining the nature of the migra-
tion and cultural changes, looking at the following
factors:
arriving in settled vs. unsettled land the number of new settlers
the degree of contact between new settlers and
the local population
the strength of links between the mother city/
homeland and colonies
the causes of migration, i.e., search for land to
settle, trade, exploitation of natural resources,
or religious reasons
It seems that place-names can serve as a criterion
for identifying the migration paradigm. Settlement in
inhabited sites and the use of original place-namesindicates a high level of interaction between new-
comers and the local population. In the case of the
Philistine migration, this pattern may be explained
by the limited number of immigrants (who became
the elite) and the large number of locals, who con-
tinued using the old Semitic place-name. Although
17 It might be suggested that the Crusader castle called La
Fve is based on the Arabic name al-Fula, meaning the bean
(Kedar and Pringle 1985: 166). The name might be related to a
city mentioned by Thutmose III as Apr (or Apl), i.e., Afula
(Kedar and Pringle 1985: 166). It has also been suggested that the
name Afula stems from early Semitic opel, meaning citadel
(Dever 1992: 87). Thus, this site name may reflect an ancient tra-dition that refers to this place. In contrast, we may point to other
sites (e.g., Monfort, Chateau Plerin [= Atlit]) that the Crusaders
named without any allusion to local tradition, although these
might have been settled in earlier periods.
In addition, several Frankish villages were established during
the 12th century c.e., most of which were called by non-Semitic
names.
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22 ITZHAQ SHAI BASOR 354
place-names do not necessarily signify the nature of
the link with the homeland, it is possible that the
Philistines did not name their cities in their original
languages or dialects (with the possible exclusion
of Ziklag) because they eventually abandoned their
mother tongues and did not have regular interactionwith their homeland.
Colonies established in the 19th and 20th centu-
ries c.e. in Africa and Asia did so with the mission
of civilizing local populations (van Dommelen
2005: 110). The ancient Greeks and Phoenicians,
however, did not colonize with this incentive, nor did
the Philistines in the southern Levant.
Colonies foster interaction between newcomers
and locals. These relationships can create new com-
munities, described by postcolonial theorists as hy-
brid cultures (van Dommelen 2005: 116), which lead
to the development of unique and new traditions.
Hybridization is the practice of mixed origins (vanDommelen 2005: 11618; 2006: 13940) and high-
lights the social meeting (van Dommelen 2006: 137).
This view emphasizes that material culture is affected
by the traditions of both the local population and the
colonizers.
Colonialism is defined by an uneven economic,
political, or military relationship between communi-
ties (van Dommelen 2005: 138). While the Phoeni-
cian colonies kept in touch with their mother cities
and lived far from local populations (Boardman 2001:
3940; van Dommelen 2005: 137), it seems that the
Philistines had no relations with their homeland.
Moreover, the Philistines, like the Greeks a few cen-
turies later, moved into existing settlements (Board-
man 2001: 38, 40; van Dommelen 2005: 120). It seems
most fitting, therefore, to compare the Philistine ar-
rival in the southern Levant to the phenomenon of
the Greek colonies. The latter established their colo-
nies with the aim of setting up a new life (van Dom-
melen 2005: 121), and they were interested in land
(Boardman 2001: 40).
Yasur-Landau reached the same conclusion when
looking for an explanation for the change in settlement
pattern in Philistia from the Late Bronze Age to the
Iron Age I (Yasur-Landau 2002: 2056, 21620).Moreover, the Greek model includes defining a formal
territory of the colony and urban planning, which again
can be identified in the city plans of the Philistines cit-
ies (in those that were excavated, i.e., Ashkelon, Ek-
ron, and Ashdod; and see Barako 2000: 521).
At the end of the Bronze Age, people of the Ae-
gean settled in Cyprus and along the Levantine coast
(T. Dothan 1982; Barako 2000; Boardman 2001: 34).
They also occupied the western coast of Anatolia,
Sardinia, Sicily, and south Italy (Boardman 2001: 34).
It seems that in the west, they looked for resources
such as metals and minerals rather than land (Markoe
1998: 234). However, since there are almost no suchresources along the southern Levantine coast, it is
reasonable to assume that the Sea People who estab-
lished new cities here were searching for land. This
explains the similarity between the Philistines and the
later Greeks, in contrast to other settlers, and could
explain the issue of place-naming. The Philistines
who came to the southern Levant were looking for
land on which to live. Since they settled in an already
occupied region, they had to cooperate with the local
population and could not just exploit its resources
(unlike, for example, the Phoenicians who settled in
the western Mediterranean).
In the Bible, there are several examples of placesthat have two or more names, each one of which is
used by a different population in a different lan-
guage.18 Although it may be suggested that the Phi-
listines renamed their cities in a similar manner, the
limited historical evidence does not support this. It
also should be noted that even if the Philistines used
different names for their towns, these names only
survived for a short period of time. For example, the
dedication inscription from Ekron (Gitin, Dothan,
and Naveh 1997) indicates that its ruler, Achish,
called the city by the original Semitic name (despite
using a non-Semitic personal name!).
It may be that the names of the five Philistine
cities were the names that the surrounding people
(or even the Canaanites who lived in these cities
together with Philistines) called the cities. In this
context, one should remember that according to the
biblical account (Josh 11:22; Jer 47:5), among the
Philistines lived the Anakim, meaning giants, who
occupied Canaan before the Israelites (Num 13:29;
Deut 2:10, 21; 9:12).19 In Num 13:33, the Anakim
are mentioned as the descendants of the Nefilim
18 For example, when Mount Hermon is mentioned in Deut
3:9, it states that the Phoenicians call [it] Hermon Sirion, and theAmorites call it Senir. See also Wimmer and Maier (2007), who
suggested that Tell es-Safi may have had two place-names, Zefat
and Gath, based on a hieratic inscription from the site.19 Albright (1950: 328, n. 2) suggested that the Iyaneq men-
tioned in the Egyptian Execration Texts should be attributed to
a tribal name related to the biblical Anakim. Yet, there are no other
extra-biblical sources that show continuity from the Anakim of the
Middle Bronze Age to those of the Iron Age.
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2009 UNDERSTANDING PHILISTINE MIGRATION 23
(Gen 5:4). After the Israelite conquest, the only sur-
vivors of the Anakim remained in the Philistine cities
of Gaza, Gath, and Ashdod (Josh 11:22).20 Hence,
according to the biblical narrative, there seems to
be a link between the new group of Philistines and
a local pre-Israelite and pre-Philistine grouptheAnakim (Gordon 2004: 3233).21
Furthermore, as Finkelstein (2000: 168) has shown,
almost 80 percent of the Iron Age I sites in Philistia
were already inhabited in the Late Bronze Age. The
Medinet Habu reliefs show that there were Canaanite
women and children among the Philistines in the early
stages of their arrival (Sweeney and Yasur-Landau
1999: 138). This evidence is integrated with the pres-
ence of Canaanite cooking pots and loom weights
alongside Aegean ones (e.g., Bunimovitz and Yasur-
Landau 1996). Thus, while stability in settlement
pattern from the Late Bronze Age to the Iron Age I
(Finkelstein 1996; 2000) could point to similar in-habitants, the presence of new immigrants in the
region is also well attested.
Comparing the Philistine migration to the south-
ern coastal plain of Israel with other historical mass
migrations highlights its uniqueness. Even in the Early
Iron Age I, the Philistines underwent assimilation
(e.g., Bunimovitz 1990), acculturation (e.g., Stone
1995), or creolization (Ben-Shlomo, Shai, and Maeir
2004) with the local Canaanite culture. This could
indicate that the Canaanites were not only in com-
mercial contact with the Philistines, but that the two
populations actually lived together. Since such con-
tact is a bilateral cultural process, it is much more
similar to creolization or cultural fusion (Uziel 2007),
and unlike acculturation, which suggests outside in-
fluence only.
It seems that as early as the first stage of their settle-
ment in the southern Levant, the Philistine newcomers
were involved with the autochthonic Canaanite in-
habitants. This is well supported by the fact that the
Philistines did not establish new settlements, but in-
stead reoccupied and replanned existing Canaanite
sites, which had been settled prior to the Philistines
arrival. Canaanite city names were in use throughout
the Iron Age, as indicated by Egyptian, Assyrian, and
Babylonian documents, biblical references, as well asthe dedication inscription from Ekron (Gitin, Dothan,
and Naveh 1997). This may indicate that although
these cities became Philistine as political entities, the
old Canaanite inhabitants did not disappear.
It is clear that the elite and upper-class culture in
these cities was Philistine, but the local populations,
at least part of them, remained in those cities. It has
been suggested that economic demands forced the
Philistines to communicate with the local Canaanites
(Sasson 1997: 63031, n. 15); based on the above
archaeological, historical, and onomastical evidence,
it seems much more likely that, from the first stage
of Philistine settlement in the southern Levant, sig-nificant Canaanite elements were present and there-
fore influenced Philistine material culture.
In conclusion, it is well accepted that the Philis-
tines arrived in the southern Levant in order to find
land, and settled in an occupied region.22 From the
first stage, they interacted with local populations in
and around these cities, as indicated by unchanged
city names. The best parallel to this migration mode
is Greek colonial policy, which was also fueled by
a search for land, and in which the newcomers also
came in contact with the native people of the region.
In other historical cases, ones in which newcomers
had fewer interactions with the local populations and
greater links to the homeland (for example, the Phoe-
nician and New England colonies), names were usu-
ally changed.
acknowledgments
I would like to thank Prof. A. Maeir, Dr. Joe Uziel, and
Mr. Alex Zukerman, who read earlier drafts of this paper
and offered various comments. In addition, I would like to
thank Mrs. S. Brickman for English editing and comments.
Needless to say, all opinions expressed here, and any mis-
takes, are the sole responsibility of the author.
20 This led scholars (e.g., Mattingly 1992: 222) to argue that
Goliath was one of the descendants of the Anakim in Philistia. But
others showed that the name Goliath derived from the Anatolian
region. See, for example, Ehrlich 1992.
21 In addition to the Anakim, Zalcman (2003: 48485) sug-gested that another subgroup of Philistines is mentioned in the
Bible, the Sippites (myps). Based on 1 Chr 20:4, it seems that the
Sippites are the descendants of the Rephaim, a nation of giants or
warriors according to the meaning of their name in Ugarit (Smith
1992: 675). It seems likely that the Rephaim were a local Semitic
group, and if we accept Zalcmans correlation of the Rephaim and
the Sippites, it is another indication that the Philistines were con-
sidered a native group in the Bible.
22 Sherratt (1998) and Bauer (1998: 15961) claimed that the
Philistines should be defined as a socioeconomic class that wanted
to maintain the trade network of the Late Bronze Age. In contrast,
others (e.g., Barako 2000; Sharon 2001; Dothan and Zukerman
2004; Yasur-Landau 2002) showed that historical documents and
archaeological finds suggest that the Philistines should be defined
as a foreign ethnic group.
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24 ITZHAQ SHAI BASOR 354
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