Journals Religions Volume 11 Issue 10 10.3390/rel11100487
The Religion of Idumea and Its Relationship to Early Judaism
by Yigal LevinORCID
Abstract
For several hundred years, from the late Iron Age to the end of the 2nd century BCE, the southern neighbor of Judea was “Idumea”, populated by descendants of Edomites, together with Qedarite and other Arabs and a mix of additional ethnicities. This paper examines the known data on the identity, especially religious identity, of these Idumeans, using a wide range of written sources and archaeological data. Within the Bible, “Edom” is presented as Israel’s twin and its harshest enemy, but there are hints that the Edomites worshipped the God of Israel. While the origins of the “Edomite deity” Qaus remain obscure, as does the process of their migration into southern Judah, the many inscriptions from the Persian period show that Qaus became the most widely worshipped deity in the area, even if other gods, including Yahweh, were also recognized. The Hellenistic period brought heightened Greek and Phoenician influence, but also the stabilization of “Idumea” as an administrative/ethnic unit. Some of the practices of this period, such as male circumcision, show an affinity to the Judaism of the time. This paper also discusses the outcome of the Hasmonean conquest of Idumea and the incorporation of its inhabitants into the Jewish nation.
Keywords: Edom; Idumea; Mareshah; Makkedah; Khirbet el Kom; Persian period; Hellenistic period; Qaus; Second Temple Judaism
1. Introduction
For several hundred years, there existed, south of Judea, an ethnic and administrative entity which we call “Idumea”. While the origins of this entity and the process by which it came to be are debated (and will be discussed below), its end is well-known. Idumea was conquered by the Hasmonean ruler John Hyrcanus I near the end of the second century BCE and, at least according to Josephus, some Idumeans seem to have been inducted into the Jewish nation/religion (Antiquities 13.257). One well-known result of this was Herod, King of Judea and rebuilder of the (Jewish) Temple, who, according to Josephus and additional sources, was descended from an Idumean family who had been converted to Judaism.1
The conquest of Idumea by John Hyrcanus I was the end of a long process. The tradition of a close relationship between Jews and Idumeans, or Edomites,2 goes back a long way. “Two nations are in your womb, and two peoples born of you shall be divided; the one shall be stronger than the other, and the elder shall serve the younger” (Gen. 25:23), said God to Rebekah.3 “You shall not abhor an Edomite, for he is your brother” (Deut. 23:7), God instructed the people of Israel. “Is not Esau Jacob’s brother?” asked Malachi (1:2). Within the specifically Jewish collection that we call the Hebrew Bible, Esau and Jacob, the eponymous ancestors of Edom and Israel, were twins, and this influenced the relationship between their descendants throughout the biblical period.4 While we have no way of knowing what the Edomites thought about this relationship, Edom and Judah and then Idumea and Judea were of course geographically very close, so it would stand to reason that their inhabitants would have more than a few cultural traits in common.5
The purpose of this paper, then, is to examine the role that religion played in the identity of the people whom we call the Idumeans, who lived in the late Iron Age and then in the Persian and Hellenistic periods in what had been southern Judah, and the possible influence that Idumean religion had on the development of Judaism, at this crucial stage in its formation. In order to do this, we shall examine texts and artifacts from the relevant periods, looking for signs of cross-fertilization between the two cultures as well.
2. Who Were the Edomites?
The very first evidence of “Edom” as a specific group goes back to Egyptian sources of the late thirteenth century BCE.6 Based on the few Iron Age inscriptions found on both sides of the ʿArabah,7 Vanderhooft has classified the Edomite language as Northwest Semitic, “in the Canaanite linguistic group”, and not, as has sometimes been claimed, as an Arabic dialect.8 This of course matches the biblical view of the Edomites as Israel’s “brothers”. According to Rollston, the late Iron Age Edomite script seems to be based on that of Aramaic.9 There is a debate on the precise date and process by which a full-fledged Edomite kingdom arose,10 but the existence of such a kingdom by the eighth century BCE is clearly attested in contemporary Assyrian inscriptions, in a small number of seal impressions mentioning kings of Edom, in a few of the Arad ostraca, and by what seems to be a distinctive Edomite material culture, on both sides of the ʿArabah.11 Like Judah and some of the other states of the southern Levant, Edom managed to survive Neo-Assyrian hegemony as a vassal kingdom, and several kings of Edom are mentioned in Neo-Assyrian sources.12 Edom actually seems to have been the last Levantine kingdom to be abolished by the Neo-Babylonians, apparently during of Nabunidus’ 553/552 campaign to Tema in Arabia, as seen by mention of [U]dummu in the Neo-Babylonian chronicle, by the cliff-side relief discovered at Selaʿ in southern Jordan in 1994,13 and especially by the fact that no such state or even district as Edom is known to exist in later periods.14 Bienkowski has shown that there is almost no evidence of direct continuity of Edomite settlement east of the ʿArabah through the sixth century and into the Persian period.15 The area that had been Iron Age Edom became a part of “Arabia”. In fact, though we have no specific evidence of wide-scale deportations from Edom, the collapse of Edomite society was so complete that unlike the persistence of the names “Moabitis” and “Ammonitis” in central Transjordan into the Hellenistic period and later, the name Edom totally disappeared from the area east of the ʿArabah. In the Persian period, this area was controlled by the Arab tribes known as Qedar (on which see below), later to be replaced by the Nabateans.16 Iron Age Edom was gone.
3. Idumea: The New Edom
However, by the early Hellenistic period, there existed an administrative unit, an eparchia (ἐπαρχία), hyparchia (ὕπαρχεία), or even a “satrapy” (σατραπεία)—different sources use different terms—called “Idumea”, which included the Arad and Beer-sheba valleys, the southern Shephelah, and the southern Judean Hills. This unit was first mentioned in Diodorus’ description of the events that occurred in the area in the year 312 BCE.17 The earliest reference to Idumea as an administrative unit can be found in papyri from Cairo that recorded the journey made by the Ptolemaic tax collector Zenon in 259 BCE. He mentioned the port of Gaza, Marisa, and Adoreon in Idumea.18 Another early reference is in the Letter of Aristeas 107–120. From further references in 1 Maccabees (for example, chp. 5) and in various quotes by Josephus, it is clear that in the second century BCE the region south of Beth-zur was known as Idumea, and was considered to be separate from Judea, at least until it was taken over by John Hyrcanus I sometime around 107 BCE (Antiquities 13.256–257; Wars 1.63).
So what, if any, is the connection between the Iron Age kingdom of Edom east of the ʿArabah and the Hellenistic period district of Idumea, west of the Dead Sea? As we know, there is evidence of Edomite settlement in the Negev as early as the seventh century BCE.19 It would seem that an Edomite population lived within southern Judah by this time, perhaps worshipping at the shrines at Qiṭmit and at ʿEn Ḥaṣeva.20 Of the seven short and mostly fragmentary inscriptions found at Qiṭmit, four seem to include references to the deity קוס, QWS.21 This deity, vocalized by various scholars as either “Qaus” or “Qôs”,22 is widely regarded as “the god of Edom”, an identification which is discussed further below. An ostracon which Naveh classified as “Edomite” and a seal with the personal name qwsʾ (another apparent reference to Qaus), both apparently from the seventh century BCE, were found at Aroer in the Negev.23 According to Thareani, Aroer, a caravan center on the southern frontier of Judah, was frequented by Edomites and Arabians.24
Of particular significance is the late seventh or early sixth-century ostracon from Ḥorvat ʿUza, in which the writer wished the addressee whtbrktk lqws—“and I bless you by Qaus”.25 This is apparently the earliest known inscription in which Qaus is mentioned independently as a divine name, not as a theophoric element in a person’s name.26 Basing their analysis on Naveh’s reading of previously published ostraca,27 Beit Arieh and Cresson considered both the script and the use of the hiphʿil (rather than the expected piʿel) as being particularly Edomite. This is significant, because all of the other 34 ostraca found at the site were specifically Hebrew, showing once again the beginnings of Edomite settlement in the area prior to the Babylonian conquest. A more-or-less contemporary ostracon from Tell el-Kheleifeh near the Gulf of Eilat/Aqaba shows the same type of script, and includes at least four names with the element QWS.28
It is often claimed that during the very late stages of the Iron Age, the Edomites “invaded” the territory of southern Judah, establishing a presence in the eastern Negev.29 As the kingdom of Judah fell to the Babylonians, the Edomites took over its southern regions. This explains, among other things, the extreme anger evident in some of the later biblical texts relating to Edom (such as Psalm 137:7; Obadiah;30 Malachi 1:2–4 and others), and of course the famous Arad ostraca nos. 24 (“lest Edom should come there”) and 40 (“the evil which Edo[m has done]”).31 This was also the explanation given by Beit Arieh and Cresson for their find of an Edomite ostracon in the Judahite fortress at Ḥorvat ʿUza: “the fort was captured by the Edomites shortly before the Babylonian conquest… the eastern part of the Judean Negev was occupied by the Edomites…”.32 To what extent the Edomite kingdom, as a vassal of Babylon, took an active part in the destruction of the towns and fortresses of southern Judah has been debated,33 but the evidence seems to support the notion that by the time Judah fell in 586 BCE, there was already a substantial Edomite population in southern Judah, and when the Edomite kingdom fell as well, it was these people who continued to carry on the Edomite cult and identity.34 It is to this “Edomite Diaspora” to which we now turn.
4. When Was the Province of Idumea Created?
It is now widely acknowledged that there was, in fact, no province of Idumea at all during the Persian period.35 Such a province is not mentioned in any of our sources for the period, literary or epigraphic. We know of no stamps or coins issued by such a province, at a time when they were being issued by Samaria, Judah, Gaza, Ashkelon, Ashdod, and the various Phoenician cities.36 As Eph’al and Naveh pointed out in their study of the ostraca said to have been found at Khirbet el-Kôm, situated near the Mareshah-Hebron road and identified as the biblical Makkedah; “our ostraca do not contain any administrative or professional titles, and indicate nothing about state or regional administration”.37
As most scholars now recognize, during the Persian period the southern Judean Hills, the southern Shephelah, and the Negev, rather than being ruled by Edomites/Idumeans, were actually controlled by an Arabic-speaking group known as the Qedarites. The eponym of this group (spelled “Kedar” in most English translations) appears in the Bible as Ishmael’s second son, after Nebaioth (Gen. 25:13).38 The Qedarites are widely attested in the Bible and in Assyrian inscriptions from the late eighth century onward.39 It would seem that by the mid-fifth century at the latest, these Qedarite Arabs had established their control over the Negev and Sinai, as well as the old land of Edom. Within the Bible, Nehemiah’s southern neighbor and enemy is “Geshem the Arab” (Neh. 2:6). This name and that of Qynw son of Geshem, designated “king of Qedar”, have been found on inscriptions from Tell el-Maskhutah in the eastern Nile delta and at Dedan in Arabia.40 Arabic names have been found on ostraca at Tell el-Kheleifeh, Arad, Beer-sheba, Sheikh Zuweid and Tell el-Farʿah (south), at Lachish,41 at Mareshah,42 as well as on the “Khirbet el-Kôm/Makkedah” ostraca.43
It would seem that the solidifying of the Qedarite Arabs’ control of the area occurred in the wake of Cambyses’ campaign to Egypt in the summer of 525 BCE. According to Herodotus, Cambyses employed the aid of “the king of the Arabs”, who supplied water for the Persian troops and guided them through the desert to the borders of Egypt (Herodotus, Histories 3: 4–9).44 In doing so, Cambyses mirrored the deeds of Esarhaddon during his invasion of Egypt in 671.45 Cambyses then established a permanent relationship with the Arabs. In his description of the “fifth satrapy” as it was during the days of Darius I, Herodotus noted that “the part belonging to the Arabians paid no tribute” (3. 91). It would seem that the city of Gaza and its environs, as well as the trade routes from Gaza inland towards Mareshah, Hebron, and Ein-gedi and towards Beer-sheba, Arad, and Arabia were actually granted by Cambyses to the Arabs, chief among whom were the Qedarites, in return for their aid during his Egyptian campaign.46 Gaza became the terminus port of the Arabian trade. Its mint was probably the most prolific in the area,47 and many of the so-called “Philisto-Arabian” coins were found in the Hebron area as well, showing Gaza’s ties to this area.48
This situation continued through the end of the Persian period.49 The change came in 333 BCE when Alexander, after a two-month siege, razed Gaza to the ground because its ruler Batis (perhaps a Qedarite Arab), insisted on remaining loyal to the Persian king.50 Gaza lost its status as the major port of the southern coast and the Qedarites lost their control of the trade routes. This is reflected in the total cessation of use of the “Philisto-Arabian” coins after 332.51 In the following years, the area was contested by Alexander’s heirs, Ptolemy son of Lagos (later Ptolemy I Soter, king of Egypt), and Antigonus Monophthalmos. In 312, Ptolemy, aided by Seleucus, defeated Antigonus at “Old Gaza” and continued up the coast as far as Sidon (Diodorus, xix 80–86). Antigonus, in reaction, mounted an expedition “from the eparchia of Idumea” to the land of the “Arabs who are called Nabataeans”. Since the Qedarites had disappeared from the area, the southern hills and the Shephelah were now reorganized as an eparchia. The new district was now named after its main inhabitants and the province of Idumea was created.52
5. Idumean “Ethnogenesis” under Qedarite Rule
What of the Idumeans themselves, living for over two centuries in what had been southern Judah, without any known political, cultural, or religious organization? How did they identify themselves? Did they consider themselves “refugees” from old Edom? Did they think of themselves as “natives”? Can we even think of them in terms of “ethnicity”?
The question of just what comprises “ethnicity” has been debated, mostly among sociologists and anthropologists.53 The question of the extent by which ethnicity can be defined through archaeological evidence, i.e., material remains, makes the issue even more problematic.54 For our purposes, we define an ethnic group as one that shares a common culture (including some, but not necessarily all, of the following: religion, language, literature, material culture) and at least an idea of a common origin. Members of such a group are often identified as such by others. From the evidence that we have, by the late fourth century BCE, the Idumeans certainly met these criteria, and were thus made the center of the new district of Idumea. What we wish to address is the process by which they arrived at that point—their “ethnogenesis”.
6. The Epigrahic Evidence
Since we have absolutely no literary descriptions, emic or etic, of Idumean society, religion, or self-identity during the Persian period, and even the archaeological record from the area is rather scanty,55 most of our information comes from epigraphic material. Fortunately, the past several decades have produced quite a lot of such material, from Lachish, Arad, Beer-sheba, Mareshah, Khirbet el-Kôm/Makkedah, and several other sites in the area. At present nearly 2000 such items are known, mostly Aramaic language ostraca, some of which have been found in archaeological excavations, but most of which are unprovenanced but attributed to Khirbet el-Kôm/Makkedah.56 Although not all of this material has been published, it still has much to teach us.
From a chronological point of view, the vast majority of these ostraca are from the very final decades of Persian rule and from the first few decades after Alexander’s conquest of the area. This includes the Beer-sheba and Arad ostraca published by Naveh, which he dated on paleographical grounds to the fourth century BCE, and most of those from Mareshah as well, although finds from the latter site continue into the Seleucid and Hasmonean periods, down to the end of the second century BCE.57 The vast majority of the “unprovenanced” (“Khirbet el-Kôm/Makkedah”) group are commercial and administrative documents, many of which are dated according to the Babylonian calendar, typically giving the date, the month, and the regnal year of the reigning king, some specifying the king’s name, others not. Generally speaking, the dates of the entire corpus range from the 42nd year of Artaxerxes II (362 BCE) until the 5th year of Alexander IV (311 BCE).58 Aḥituv and Yardeni also published one ostracon dated to “Talmaios the king”, presumably Ptolemy I, who assumed kingship of Egypt and the southern Levant in 306.59 What all of this seems to indicate is an increased amount of administrative activity in the area during this period, which included an increased use of writing. This seems to fit well with Fantalkin and Oren’s reassessment of the archaeological data from the area and especially its chronology. In their view, most of the Persian period finds in the various sites of the Negev and the Shephelah, such as Arad, Beer-sheba, Tell el-Farʿah (south), Lachish, and others, should be dated to the fourth century BCE and show heightened imperial involvement in the area. They suggested that such heightened involvement was caused by the Persian Empire’s loss and subsequent reconquest of Egypt during the mid-fourth century.60 At Mareshah as well, the majority of Persian period finds seem to represent the final stages of that period.61 In any case, the renewal of administrative activity in the area also means that there was more to administer: more sedentary population, more agriculture, more trade, more taxes.62 So it would seem that the region south of Judah, ravaged by war and invasion in the early sixth century BCE, was now being resettled two centuries later.
7. Onomastics as a Sign of Identity
We have already seen that the area of Idumea was administered by the Qedarite Arabs, at least from 526 BCE. From the various analyses of the epigraphic material undertaken by Zadok, Naveh, Porten, Lemaire, Eshel, and others, we find a very high percentage (about 30%) of names that could be characterized linguistically as “Arabian”, “Edomite” names at about 25%, with the next largest specific groups being Aramaic and Judahite/Hebrew. At the bottom of the list were Egyptians, Phoenicians, and “possibly Old Iranian”.63 When theophoric elements were listed, we find that Qaus was the most common (sometimes appearing in names that are linguistically Arabic),64 followed by El, Baal, YHW(H), and a handful of others. Assuming that there is some correspondence (although not necessarily one-on-one) between language, worship of “national” deities, and identity,65 we can see that a large segment of the population was of Arabian descent, almost as many were Edomites, a minority consisted of Judahites and others. So while the correspondence was probably not absolute, we can assume that most (but not necessarily all!) worshippers of Qaus would probably have identified themselves as “Edomite/Idumean”, and most worshipers of Yahweh would have been considered “Judahites/Jews”.66 As such, at least by the fourth century BCE, worshippers of Qaus were almost in the majority, with Yahweh-worshippers at under 4%.
The distribution of these names, however, was not even. As emphasized by Naveh, at Arad most of the “officers” of the fortress seem to have had Hebrew or Yahwistic names, while most of the people to whom the supplies were given had Arabic names.67 Qaus names were a minority there.68
The onomasticon of the ostraca found at Beer-sheba, on the other hand, was different. Of the tax-paying farmers listed there, about a third had clearly Arabic names, another third included the element Qaus, and most of the rest were of a general nature. Naveh listed one Iranian name (bgn) and one “apparently Jewish” name (dlwy).69 At Mareshah as well, we found that most of the names were Arabic and Edomite,70 some even traceable to Transjordan.71
In a table summarizing “the ethnic breakdown of the Idumean ostraca”, Stern compared the names found at Arad, Beer-sheba, Mareshah, and “unknown provenance”.72 He noted the “striking similarity” between the Mareshah names and those of “unknown provenance”: in both groups, Arabic names made up just over 30%, Idumeans around 25%, Judahites under 10% (actually, 9.09% and 5.60%), and generic “Western Semitic” just under 30%. At Arad, on the other hand, 61.22% were Judahites, 14.30% Idumean, and 12.24% Arab, while in Beer-sheba 42.62% were Arabs, 24.59% Idumeans, and less than 20% Judahites.73
8. Qaus, God of the Edomites
Unfortunately, we have little direct knowledge of society, culture, or religion of Persian period Idumea. Besides the continuity of settlement and the reappearance of the name “Idumea” in the Hellenistic period, the strongest indication we have of continued Edomite presence and self-identification in southern Judah is the use of the divine name “Qaus” as a theophoric element in personal names. As such, this element has been widely recognized as particularly (although perhaps not exclusively) Edomite.74 However, Qaus has turned out to be a rather elusive deity.
There is a debate on the origin of the god Qaus and the process by which he was “adopted” as the chief god of Edom. Some scholars have claimed to identify Qaus-names in late New Kingdom Egyptian topographical lists describing “the Shasu clans in Seir”,75 although others, such as Dearman, rightly pointed out the names’ uncertain context and pronunciation, as well as the 500-year gap before the appearance of a Qausmalaka king of Edom in the inscriptions of Tiglath-pileser III and a Qausgabari in those of Esarhaddon and Assurbanipal, making the case for continuity rather problematic.76 In any case, by the beginning of the seventh century, we found more and more such names on both sides of the ʿArabah.77
In the search for the origins of Qaus, some scholars have claimed that he was originally an Arabian deity, whose name derived from the word for “bow”, and that he was initially seen as a god of hunting.78 This idea was developed by Vriezen, although he rejected Wellhausen’s equation of Qaus with the Arabian storm god Quzaḥ, whose bow was called qaus-Quzaḥ.79 Erlich, following up on this idea, has tentatively suggested identifying a series of terracotta figurines found at Mareshah, Tel ʿErani, Tel Ḥalif, and near Bet-Nir, all within the area that we call Idumea, depicting a bearded male holding a bow and what seem to be three arrows, as representations of Qaus.80 Knauf, for both linguistic and historical reasons, suggested a contrary scheme, according to which Qaus was a “southern” manifestation of the Western Semitic storm god Haddu/Hadad, as were Milkom, Chemosh, Baal, and Yahweh.81 An even more radical approach has been taken by Zalcman, who, addressing the apparent non-mention of the Edomite deity in the Bible (unlike the gods of Ammon, Moab, Canaan, Tyre, the Philistines, and others, who are mentioned by name quite often), suggested connecting QWS to the Hebrew verbal root QWṢ, which he defined as “feel a sickening dread”, in his view equivalent to the verb PḤD, “fear”, also an epithet for the deity (as in pḥd yṣḥq, “dread of Isaac” in Genesis 31:42, 53).82 While this hypothesis has not been widely accepted, it does contribute, along with its predecessors, to our appreciation of just how close Edomite and Israelite religion might have been.
This non-mention of the Edomite god in the Bible, together with the well-attested tradition of Esau/Edom’s fraternity with Jacob/Israel and along with the several poetic references to Yahweh’s “coming up from” Edom/Seir/Sinai/Teman/Bozrah/Paran83 and the mention of “Yahweh of Teman” at Kuntillet ʿAjrud,84 has led many scholars to conclude that the Edomites were originally worshippers of Yahweh, and only “adopted” Qaus after the establishment of their monarchy, perhaps as a counter-balance to the now-rival Israelite and Judahite Yahweh.85 While this dichotomy, the assumption that Yahweh was understood as an exclusively Israelite (or rather, in this case, Judahite) deity while Qaus was an exclusively “Edomite” god at a relatively early stage, is somewhat simplistic, it is clear that by the ninth century, Yahweh, Milkom, Chemosh, Hadad and others had achieved the status of “national gods” of Israel/Judah, Ammon, Moab, and Aram respectively.86 Since they are mentioned in the Bible, the fact that Qaus is not must be significant.
Qaus-names all but disappeared from southern Transjordan after the fall of the Edomite kingdom.87 However, as already noted, their numbers increased in the area that had been Iron Age southern Judah and would eventually become Hellenistic period Idumea. The picture that emerges from the various sources and especially from the epigraphic record, is that of a mixed population. Eventually, perhaps as a counterbalance to the Arab identity of the nomads and traders to the south and to the increasingly exclusive Judahites to the north, it was the Edomite identity that came to the forefront. We see this, first of all, in the continued use of the Qaus-theophoric (presumably indicating worship of this deity). As Knauf has commented, “loyalty to the national deity probably compensated for the loss of national independence”.88 Naveh, in emphasizing the many names that have Qaus as their theophoric element and Arabic-language verbal or nominal elements, concluded that the inhabitants of at least southern Idumea could be considered “Edomite Arabs”.89 On the other hand Porten, in his analysis of the wider corpus of “Qaus” names, concluded that the verbal and nominal elements have basically the same meaning as those of Hebrew names, showing just how much the two traditions had in common. Porten wrote of “a modest penetration of Arabian”,90 and concluded that “given the geographical proximity, we are not unjustified in speaking of a Judeo-Idumean piety”.91 Another sign of identity can be seen in the continued use of the Edomite ethnonym, to such an extent that when the region was reorganized under the Ptolemys, it was officially recognized as a hyparchy of Idumea.
9. Qaus and Other Gods in Persian Period Idumea
Since the so-called “Makkedah” ostraca represent the economy of an agrarian society over several decades, they provide us with information on that society over those decades as well. Porten, in many of his studies of the ostraca, has traced the “dossiers” of several clans over several generations: the clans of Qosḥanan, of Yehokal, of Qoṣi, of Gur, of Ḥori, of Rawi, of Albaʿal, and of Baʿalrim.92 He and others then used the interconnections within and between those clans as a window into the society of fourth-century Idumea.93
Of the eight “clans” mentioned above, the first, based on the theophoric name of its founder, would seem to be Idumean, the second Judahite, and the last two “Canaanite” or “Phoenician”. However, both Porten and Stern have shown that there was a substantial amount of flexibility and intermixing between the different “ethnic groups”. For example, according to Stern, of the members of the “Gur” clan, 31% had Arabic names, while another 31% had Edomite (Qaus) names.94 Half the members of the “Phoenician” Baʿalrim family had Arabic names, almost 25% had Edomite names, one was Egyptian, and only one was “Phoenician”.95 Of the descendants of Qoṣi, more had “Qaus” names than any other, followed by “El”, one “Baal”, as well as several additional epithets.96
Of particular interest is the Yehokal family. The name “Yehokal”, and variants thereof (such as “Yokal”), appear in the Bible (Jer. 37:3; 38:1), on various Hebrew seals, bullae, and stamp impressions from late sixth-century Jerusalem, and even in fifth-century ostraca from Arad. According to Porten and Yardeni, the “founder” of this clan was a “Jew settled among Idumeans”. However, upon looking at the descendants of this “Jew”, we found that all of them bore non-Hebrew names: Qosyinqom, Qoslanṣur, Qosner, Qosʿaz, Qosʿayr, as well as several Arabic, two Egyptian, and one Aramean. None were Judahite or Yahwistic.97
While Porten and Yardeni pondered the significance of this phenomenon,98 to Stern the meaning was clear: in the “post collapse” conditions of Persian period Idumea, people of various ethnic origins did not maintain ethnic boundaries and intermixed readily. In the case of the Yehokal clan, a family that may have been descended from the pre-exilic Judahites now found itself in the minority and adapted its identity to that of what had become the majority.99 On the other hand, in his reading of one of the “Makkedah” ostraca, Lemaire suggested that the byt yhw mentioned after byt ʿzʾ (ʿUzza being a known Arabian goddess) was none other than a temple of Yahweh, situated somewhere in Idumea, perhaps at Makkedah itself.100 If this is correct, then at least some of the Judahites who remained in the area continued to worship “their” deity as well—although not necessarily exclusively.
In her publication of the ostraca found at Mareshah through the 2000 excavation season, Eshel recorded 12 “Qaus” names, 7 “Baal” names, 4 with “El”, and 3 with Yw or Yh.101 Also present were a large number of “Arabian” and “Nabatean” names, the Egyptian Ḥwr, and Babylonian Mnky. Nbwrʿy is seen as including the Babylonian deity Nabu with the Western Semitic rʿy—“Nabu is my shepherd”. Three less clear readings are ʿśw—“Esau”, which, if correct, could hint at the Idumeans’ self-identification—and the ethnonyms qdryn (“Qedarites”) and ʿrbyn (“Arabs”), perhaps listing their ethnic origins.102 In her analysis of the terracotta figurines found at various sites in the region, Erlich also emphasized the existence of Persian, Phoenician, Greek, Arabian, and local traditions.103 One particularly “Phoenician” find was a bronze pendant in the shape of the Phoenician–Punic goddess Tanit. This pendant was found in a mostly Hellenistic period context in Mareshah’s Subterranean Complex 89, which also included a limited amount of Persian period pottery, and, when compared with similar pendants from at least six other sites, would seem to have originated in the Persian period. The excavators emphasized that despite predominance of Idumean and Arabian influences on both the material culture and language and onomastics of Persian period Mareshah, there were also signs of limited Phoenician influence, of which this pendant was only one.104
So the picture that emerges is that of a mixed population, with Arabs, Edomites, Jews, and others living side-by-side and probably intermixing as well. This “intermixing” included the intermixing of various cultural aspects, including that of cultic practice.
10. Idumean Religious Practices in the Early Hellenistic Period
Unlike the radical changes that occurred in Samaria with the destruction and subsequent Hellenization of the city by Alexander and the regrouping of what we now call the “Samaritan” community around Mount Gerizim, the Hellenization of Idumea was more gradual.105 The “Makkedah” ostraca show that the economic system, including the Babylonian dating system, was still in use as late as the reign of Ptolemy I. Aramaic remained the language of internal commerce. The bilingual ostracon found in the 1971 salvage excavation by John S. Holladay at Khirbet el-Kôm/Makkedah in a Hellenistic rebuild of an Iron Age house, is a good example of the transitional period. According to the Aramaic text, on 12 Tammuz of year 6, Qôs-yadaʿ ben Hannaʾ the moneylender loaned Niqeratos 32 zuzin. In the Greek text, in year 6, 12 of the month of Panēmos, Nikēratos son of Sobbathos, received from Kos-idē the moneylender 32 drachmas. The “year 6” in question is most likely the sixth year of Ptolemy II, 279 BCE. Presumably, the lender was an Aramaic-speaking Idumean, while the borrower was Greek (although the name of his father, “Sobbathos”, is typically Judean), necessitating that the “contract” be in both languages. Of the five additional ostraca found in the same house, four were in Aramaic and one was in Greek.106
This shift is further seen at Mareshah, which was apparently the “capital” of Hellenistic Idumea until its conquest in 107 BCE. The original 1900 excavations by Bliss and Macalister uncovered (and then re-covered, as per the Ottoman law at the time) what they considered to be a totally Hellenized upper city, apparently representing the Seleucid period, prior to the Hasmonean conquest.107 Previous periods were barely touched. Subsequent excavations, however, have focused on the lower city, and even more so, on the hundreds of natural and artificial caves that probably served as the “cellars” of the (mostly long gone) houses above. Unlike the stratified tell of the upper city, these caves were filled with a mix of material, representing, in varying measures, the late Iron Age and the Persian, Ptolemaic, and Seleucid periods. Much of this material is, or may be, cultic in nature.
One question which was debated by archaeologists, is that of the existence of a temple at Hellenistic period Mareshah. In their original report, Bliss and Macalister noted the lack of a structure that they could identify as a temple, but in his reassessment of the material, Horowitz pointed out a fairly small structure in “Courtyard E”, which he identified as a shrine, similar to others throughout the Hellenistic world.108 Another putative temple was identified by Kloner in area 800 of the lower city, just south of the upper city.109
In 2005 and 2006, three fragments of a Greek limestone inscription were discovered in Subterranean Complex 57, just south of area 800. These, it soon turned out, were pieces of a much larger monumental inscription of “unknown provenance” that had been brought not long before to the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. This stele recorded correspondence between King Seleucus IV (187–175 BCE), his chief minister Heliodorus (of whom 2 Macc. 3:21–3:28 tells that he was prevented from plundering the Temple in Jerusalem by three God-sent beings), and one Olympiodoros, who was put in charge of all of the temples in Koile–Syria and Phoenicia. A partial fragment of a second copy of the same stele, which had been found by hikers at Mareshah in 1954 and handed over to the Israel Antiquities Authority in 1970, was subsequently “rediscovered” in the IAA storehouses.110 These two copies of this stele from Mareshah show that there must have, indeed, been at least one temple in the city, that was considered to be part of the state cultic system.
Subterranean Complex 57 was also the source of several more cult-related finds. Among the 323 animal bones that were found in the cave, 33 were astragals—“knucklebones”—that were widely used in the ancient world both as game pieces and for divination.111 Many additional astragals were found in the adjacent Subterranean Complex 169. Some of these were inscribed in Greek, one with the name of the goddess Nike. Some had holes drilled through them. Two astragal-shaped glass objects were also found.112
While the use of astragals is widely known in Greek culture, SC 169 also produced 127 Aramaic-language ostraca, inscribed with divination texts. Some of these were inscribed with הן, “yes”, others with לא, “no”, some with הן לא, perhaps meaning “either… or”. Some included the words הן מן אלהין, “it is from the gods”. Six of the texts mentioned Qaus, one mentioned Baal, and one mentioned the Mesopotamian goddess Nanaya. Also mentioned were various spirits and demons, including “Lilith”—whom Isaiah 34:14 seems to locate in Edom.113
This amalgamation of religious traditions could also be found in the 81 small incense altars, some stone and some pottery, that were found in this cave, some of which seemed to carry on local forms, while others clearly showed Greek influences, including dedications to the goddess Artemis.114 Seventeen stone phallic models, which can be added to four additional phalli found in other areas of the site, are another example of Greek influence: such phalli were widely used in the cults of Dionysius and Hermes.115 Of the many terracotta figurines found, several depicted Eros, and one showed a very phallic Harpocrates.116 The Mareshah stone phalli, however, unlike their Greek parallels, were all circumcised. Circumcision was looked down upon in Greek culture, but was very common in Semitic ones (on which see below).117 So here again, we can see how Greek and local traditions mixed at Mareshah. Additional objects, such as chalkstone stamps, amulets, seals, and game boards, were derived from Greek, Egyptian, Mesopotamian, and local traditions.
Of the 780 complete and fragmentary oil lamps found in the complex—understandably, considering that it is a cave!—385 could be identified as “kernos lamps”—vessels with multiple lamps attached. The lamps themselves represented a variety of types, but such a large concentration of kernoi—usually associated with cultic functions—in SC 169, seems to reinforce the cultic character of the complex.118 The same is true of two pottery “tags” bearing the notation ίεροῦ κτήματος, “holy property”.119
Several hundred clay figurines have been found at Mareshah, spanning both the Persian and Hellenistic periods. Most of the Persian period figurines seem to follow the local Levantine traditions, while most of the Hellenistic period figurines follow a more Greek style. However in the transitional period, a unique local style, which Erlich has called “Hellenistic pillar figurines”, also emerged. Erlich commented on the general similarity of these figurines to the Iron Age Judahite pillar figurines on one hand, to the “horse and rider” figurines, also known in Edom, on the other, to Greek-style herm figures and to the later Nabatean figures as well, although she did not consider the Mareshah figurines to be directly related to any of these. What they did all have in common was a general trend towards aniconism—only minimal representation of the deity’s body features. Some of them were “double-faced” and even “double-bodied”, leading Erlich to ponder whether they represent a “Pair, Couple or Twins?” and bringing to mind, among others, the “local” twins of Jacob and Esau.120 Kloner also emphasized the various aniconic stone figures found all over the site, and specifically suggested that they “may be representations of the Idumean deity Qos”.121
As in the Persian period, the names by which the inhabitants of Hellenistic Idumea named themselves and their children are an important window into their identities. Of the approximately 1200 ostraca found at Marehsah to date, about 500 were in Aramaic and most of the rest were in Greek.122 The names found on the 37 Aramaic inscriptions from SC 57 were similar to those represented in the “Makkedah” corpus, including Arabic names such as whbʾl, zbdʾdh, and ʿAbdaʾ; possible Hebrew names such as Tanḥum and Kalkol; a Babylonian or Aramaic “Nabu ben zbd”; and many “Edomite” names, such as ʿbdqws, qwsgbr, qwsnhr, qwsbnh, and qwsntn. Also represented were Aramaic renderings of the Greek names Apollonius and Demetrius.123 Similar names appear on the Aramaic ostraca from SC 196, with the addition of the definitely Jewish names Azariah and Shemaiah.124 The Greek ostraca from cave 57, presumably all from the Hellenistic period, included Greek names like Dionisios, Ptolemaios, and Zenon, but also Greek spellings of Idumean names like “Kosiada”, and a “Samaios”, which Ecker and Korzakova suggested is a Greek rendering of a Hebrew name, such as Samuel, Shamma(i), or Shemaiah.125 The Greek ostraca from SC 169 demonstrated a similar sampling: Greeks like Amasis, Ptolemaios, and Apollophanes, “Semitic” names like Ammonios, but mostly “Edomite” names such as Kosadar, Kosn[atan], and Kosias.126 Three of the texts seemed to mention a koinon, or “private association”, such as were known all over the Greek world. This particular association, however, was named for a certain “Kosadar”. So here is a good example of a local “Idumean” adopting a Greek cultural practice.127
We found similar onomastic phenomena in other parts of the city. In an Aramaic marriage contract found at in SC 84 and dated to 176 BCE, the name of the groom was qwsrm son of qwsyd, while the bride was ʾrsnh (Arsinoe—a Greek name that was common in Ptolemaic Egypt) daughter of qwsyd son of qwsyhb.128 The groom and his father had “pure” Edomite names, but the bride’s name was Greek, her father’s was Edomite, and her grandfather’s was “Edomite-Arab”. The very fact that the contract was written in Aramaic and not in Greek is evidence of the continuity of local traditions. A similar series of intergenerational relationships and name changes can be found in the famous “Sidonian” burial caves, also at Mareshah. The best-known of these inscriptions mentions an Apollophanes son of Sesmaios, head of the Sidonian community. Apollophanes, which is Greek in form, was common among Hellenized Phoenicians. The same is true for Sesmaios. Sesmaios’ daughter, also there, was Sabo, apparently an Arabic name, perhaps Nabatean. An additional epitaph was that of “Qosnatanos son of Ammoios son of Sesmaios”, and finally there was also “Babas, son of Qosnatanos son of Ammoios son of Sesmaios”. So, it would seem that the Phoenician Sesmaios gave one son a Greek name, the second an Idumean name, the third an Egyptian name, and his daughter an Arabic one. Nearby, lies Demetrios son of Meerbal (which would be Maher-Baʿal in Phoenician), the Greek-named son of a “Phoenician” father.129
Since Mareshah is the only major city in Idumea in which extensive modern excavations have uncovered remains that represent a continuum from the late Persian period into the early Hellenistic period, with a clear terminus ante quem being established by the Hasmonean conquest (no later than 107 BCE), the finds from that site can give us important information about religious practice in Idumea. We have already discussed the varied onomasticon, but there are additional finds as well. In his survey of the finds, Kloner discussed the various types of water installations, some of which he classified as “purification installations” that were “plastered and sealed like miqva’ot”, others were “reminiscent of the ancient Jewish custom of ‘9 kabim’”, and others more similar to bathtubs. His conclusion: “While there may have been a few Jewish residents of Maresha who could have used some of these installations, this does not justify the[ir] large numbers… these purification installations are evidence… that bodily purification was a custom practiced by the Idumeans residing at Maresha”.130
It is important to note that not all scholars have accepted Kloner’s assertion that the installations must have been built before the Hasmonean conquest. Both Finkelsztejn and Reich have suggested that they could have been built by the conquering Hasmoneans, either as part of their “forced conversion” of the Idumeans (on which see below), or for Jewish “colonists” that were settled in the city.131 However Adler has shown conclusively, that miqva’ot for ritual bathing only made their first appearance at about the turn of the first century BCE, and were totally unknown during the early Hellenistic period. In fact, Adler suggested that the adoption of such instillations by Jews was influenced by the appearance of Greek-style “hip-baths” in the country during the early Hellenistic period—such as were found at Mareshah. Once it became accepted that the proper way to bathe was to immerse oneself in water rather than to pour water over one’s body parts, as had been the practice previously, this practice was adopted into the ritual field as well.132
Another important identity marker of which there is evidence at Mareshah is male circumcision. While the Bible considers circumcision of males to be a condition of their inclusion into Israelite society (for example, Gen. 17:9–14; Exod. 12:48), it does not deny that circumcision was also practiced by other peoples. Jer. 9:24–25 mentions Egypt, Judah, Edom, Ammon, Moab, and the dwellers of the desert as peoples who circumcised their foreskins. In fact, the Philistines seem to be the only people to whom the Bible regularly refers as being “uncircumcised” (as in David’s ode to Saul and Jonathan in 2 Sam. 1:20), and even they seem to have adopted the practice over time.133 However, to the Greeks circumcision was anathema, and, according to 1 Macc. 1:15, Josephus, and other sources, Jews who wished to integrate themselves in Hellenistic society often underwent epispasm. According to the same sources, one of the anti-Jewish “decrees” of Antiochus IV, which led to the Maccabean revolt, was a ban on circumcision. This, presumably, only served to enforce the Jewish conception of circumcision as one of the cardinal markers of their identity.134
But what of the Idumeans? We have already mentioned Jer. 9:24–25 which mentions the Edomites as one of the circumcised nations, but we should remember that this was written from an early sixth-century Judahite perspective, and that we have no idea how widespread the practice was or what significance was attached to it by the Edomites themselves. We also have no direct evidence from the Idumeans of the Persian period. However in the Zenon Papyri mentioned above, the Hellenistic–Egyptian writer of the mid-third century BCE pointed out that slave boys purchased at Mareshah could be identified by the fact that they were circumcised. The discovery of 21 stone circumcised phalli at the site, probably meant for ritual use, is significant, since similar finds from other Hellenistic sites are usually not circumcised. So at least some Idumeans did practice circumcision, although we can have no way of knowing how common the practice was or what significance it was seen as having.
Several burial caves have been discovered at Mareshah, mostly featuring gabled kokhim or loculi, which, according to Stern, “seems to reflect a syncretism of Alexandrian and Phoenician influences”.135 Only one of the caves was found undisturbed, and the pottery found within confirmed that it had been used during the Hellenistic period. But also discovered, was that in one of the kokhim there was evidence of multigenerational secondary burials, a practice known in Iron Age Judah and which was gradually replaced in the Herodian period by use of ossuaries. So while the identity of those interred in this cave is not known, their burial does seem to represent a transitional stage, which is reflected in Jewish burial practices as well.
Another relevant discovery made at Mareshah, was that over 1000 of the pottery vessels of all different types had been perforated at some point after they were fired, basically making them unfit for use for their original function. Ruling out various functional reasons for these perforations, Stern and Noam concluded that the reason must be ritual. After comparing these vessels with similar “holey” vessels found in Jerusalem’s upper city, with mention of such practice in later rabbinic sources, and with archaeological parallels from various other times and places, they concluded that while the Mareshah perforations are unlike those found elsewhere, they do exhibit some characteristics in common with them, and as such they “may represent a continuation of an ancient enigma, but may also be an early forerunner of a later Jewish halakhic ruling”.136
A final aspect of religious life that has been discerned at Mareshah is the writing of wisdom texts, in Aramaic, a few of which have been preserved on clay bowls. Though the few surviving fragments of the texts do not seem to be copies of other known texts, they do seem to be related to the Ahiqar traditions known in their Aramaic form from Persian period Elephantine. Eshel, Puech, and Kloner were reminded that some biblical traditions see Edom as a source of wisdom (Jer. 49:7; Obad. 8, and more), at the same time reminding us that we do not really know who wrote the Mareshah texts.137 The discovery of at least four Greek abecedaries, such as the complete one found in SC 57,138 shows that the tradition of learning continued into the Hellenistic period.
11. From Southern Judah to Idumea to Southern Judea
The area that had been southern Judah was apparently ravaged by the Babylonian conquest, with or without active participation of the Edomites. The major cities and fortresses, such as Hebron, Lachish and Arad, were destroyed, and, like their brethren from the more northern parts of Judah, a large percentage of the population was exiled. But not all of them; some Judahites, as well as some Arabs and some Edomites, remained. It is even possible, that when the Edomite kingdom fell to Nabonidus, additional Edomite refugees migrated into the Negev and the southern hills. In any case, as the Persian Empire organized its southern frontier, the area became part of “Arabia”, specifically part of the kingdom of Qedar. Under the Qedarites, trade gradually increased, as did military activity. By the end of the fifth century and into the fourth, some of the fortresses had been rebuilt, taxes were being collected and commodities were being traded. Soon afterwards, coins minted at Gaza were being used throughout the area. It is possible that Mareshah, on the main route connecting Gaza and the southern hills, became the administrative center of the region, while Makkedah, just a few kilometers to the east along the same road, became its commercial hub. However only further excavations at both sites will enable us to understand their precise roles.
Although the region that would become Idumea goes almost unmentioned in the literary sources of the Persian period, we are fortunate in that a very large number of documents, mostly ostraca, have survived and have been found. From these documents we can learn quite a lot about the geography and economy of the region, but they also provide us with incomparable information on the ethnic makeup of the area’s population and their religious beliefs. Extensive excavations at Mareshah have added various details to our picture of life in Idumea. The picture that emerges is that of what in the modern world would be called “a melting pot”—a convergence of Edomite, Arab, Judahite, Phoenician, and other traditions, all of which became what we now call “Idumean”. Perhaps, like the Jews in their diaspora, the Edomites’ loyalty to their god Qaus was a factor in the preservation of their identity. The ethnos that emerged had its roots in old Edom, but was well-established in the new Idumea.
Around 107 BCE the Hasmonean ruler of Judea, John Hyrcanus I, conquered Idumea, and, at least according to Josephus (Antiquities 13.257), forcibly converted the inhabitants to Judaism. According to Josephus, they were given the choice of either being circumcised and adopting the rest of “the laws of the Jews”, or of being expelled. Strabo (Geographica 16.2.34) mentions the Idumeans as people who were originally “Nabataeans, but owing to a sedition they were banished from there, joined the Judeans, and shared in the same customs with them”, with no mention of coercion.139 While the archaeological evidence from Mareshah does point to a major decline near the end of the second century,140 scholars have long been divided on how literally to take Josephus’ claim of forced conversion. To summarize the arguments against such forced conversion: a. the Hasmoneans did not seem to employ such a policy elsewhere;141 b. such forced conversion would have been without precedent in either the Ancient Near East or in the Hellenistic world; c. such forced conversion would have been foreign to Judaism as well; d. since, as we have seen, there is evidence that the Idumeans were circumcised in any case, Josephus’ claim seems not to reflect historical reality; e. the retention of at least parts of Idumea within the truncated Jewish realm by Pompey and Gabinius only a generation later, while all other predominantly non-Jewish areas, including Samaria, were detached from it, is proof of the Idumeans’ rapid integration into the Jewish nation—which would not have happened had they been coerced. In fact, during the Jewish revolt of 66–73 CE, we find “Idumeans” fighting together with other Jews (War 4.279–331).142 According to Kasher and others, their close affinity to Judaism as reflected in biblical tradition, and perhaps common aversion to Hellenism as well, actually made their integration into the Hasmonean state a natural one.143 The aniconic tendencies that can be seen at Hellenistic Mareshah may be further evidence of the Idumeans’ affinity to Judaism. In any case, while we have no idea of the demographics involved, the integration of the Idumeans into Judaism undoubtedly had an influence on the latter as well, and Stern has suggested that at least some of the “Idumean” customs noted above, such as ritual immersion in baths, burial in caves with kokhim, and perforation of pottery vessels possibly as a way of purifying them may have eventually been adapted into Pharisaic Judaism.144
However this episode is to be understood, Idumea did indeed become integrated into the Jewish state. While Mareshah was abandoned, the many miqva’ot found in late Hellenistic and early Roman Hebron can be seen as evidence of its “Jewishness”.145 On the other hand, we do know that at least some Idumeans seem to have preserved their identity even under Hasmonean rule. Those “Idumeans” whom Josephus described as coming to fight in Jerusalem, while obviously loyal to the rebel cause, were recruited as a group. In Antiquities 15.253 Josephus noted that Costobarus (presumably a Greek form of qwsgbr), appointed by Herod to be governor of Idumea and Gaza, was descended from the priests of “Koze (κωζαι), whom the Idumeans believed to be a god”. Others seem to have migrated to Egypt, where they continued to worship Qaus, who was eventually identified with Apollo.146
However these “Qaus loyalists” seem to have been in the minority. Antipater, father of Herod, who was appointed governor of the district, though identified as “an Idumean”, seems to have considered himself to be at least partially Jewish, and named one of his sons Joseph and his daughter Salome, both specifically Jewish names. In fact, Josephus (Antiquities 15.65) referred to an “uncle” of Herod’s who was also named Joseph, which may indicate that at least Antipater’s family had already adopted a Jewish identity a generation earlier.147 Herod is usually credited with the construction of the massive shrines of the Machpelah Cave and of Mamre, both in formerly Idumean Hebron, although neither Josephus nor later rabbinic sources actually state this specifically.148 Some scholars, such as Magen, considered these structures to have been meant primarily for use as Idumean sanctuaries.149 Others have emphasized their Jewish aspects. Arnon, for example, suggested that Herod built the shrine in order to win the favor of his Jewish subjects, to reinforce his own status as descendant and heir of the Patriarchs, to highlight his own abilities as a ruler, to strengthen the ties between the former Idumeans and the Jews, and, finally, to encourage heightened economic, civil, and military activity in the area in order to strengthen his rule of the region.150 Building upon the fourth of these reasons, I would suggest that Herod may have been trying to cater to both his Jewish and his Idumean sides—after all, both Jews and Idumeans were descended from Abraham and Isaac, who were traditionally buried there, together with Jacob.
12. Conclusions: The Religion of Idumea
As far as presently available evidence allows us to reconstruct, the religious practices of the Iron Age Edomites were similar to those of other Western Semitic peoples. Like many Levantine groups, at least some Edomites practiced circumcision, although we do not know what significance, if any, they attached to the practice. A few biblical and other references hint at the possibility that they worshipped Yahweh, perhaps in conjunction with other deities. Within the Bible, there is a tradition that their ancestor Esau was the twin brother of Jacob, progenitor of Israel. While we do not know if the Edomites had a similar tradition, this shows that at least in the Judahite eye, Edomites and Israelites had much in common.
At some point in the late Iron Age, Qaus became the “national deity” of the Edomites. There is a debate on the origin and nature of this deity, but his name appears as a theophoric element in an increasing number of inscriptions found on both sides of the ʿArabah. From these and from additional evidence, we can reconstruct an “Edomite migration” into the Negev during the late Iron Age, although this “migration’s” character remains debated—some scholars see it as an “invasion”, while others prefer a more peaceful “infiltration” model. There is also a debate on the role that the Edomites played in the fall of the kingdom of Judah in 586 BCE. In any case, after the fall of Edom itself, apparently in 552, it was the “Edomite Diaspora” in southern Judah that continued to carry on Edomite name, identity, and religion.
We have very little information about these Edomites during the Persian period. We know that the area they lived in was controlled by the Qedarite Arabs, and a significant number of Arabic names appear in the onomastic record. The many ostraca found in the region also hint at other groups: Judahites, Phoenicians, Egyptians, Mesopotamians, and others, although Qaus remains the most frequently used theophoric element. A unique group of figurines identified in the region may be representations of Quas. The fact that we can trace some of the families mentioned through several generations, as well as the “mixing” of such components as Arabic verbal forms with Qaus as the theophoric element, also shows that the inhabitants did not maintain strict boundaries between groups. Persian period Idumea was a “melting pot” of various groups. But in the end, when the Qedarites lost their control of the region, it was the “Idumean” identity that prevailed—when the area was organized as a “hyparchy” in the early Hellenistic period, the name that appears in multiple sources is “Idumea”. From these sources, we can see the continued worship of Qaus and the continued practice of circumcision. The archaeological evidence, mostly from Mareshah, shows both a continuity of local traditions, such as circumcision, and a gradual influx of Greek influence: Greek names; Greek gods; Greek practices, such as the use of astragals; and the increasing use of the Greek language alongside continued use of Aramaic, for example for divination. This fusion of traditions can be seen in the material traces of cult: altars, phalli (a Greek practice, but circumcised), figurines, and more. Some practices, such as burial caves, bathing installations, and perforated vessels, also show an affinity to later Judaism, and may actually have influenced the later development of these “Jewish” practices. The onomastic record, too, shows a mélange: Greek, Judean, Phoenician, and other names and deities, together with the continued use of Qaus, “Kos” in Greek, as the most common theophoric element in the region.
We do not possess an “Idumean Bible”. No significant text from any period describes the beliefs and practices of the Edomites/Idumeans. Their religious practices can only be deduced from such secondary sources as the Bible and the various classical writers, from artifacts such as figurines, altars, and other installations, and of course from the onomastic record, especially the use theophoric elements. From all of these, we can trace the development of their tradition, from what would seem to be a typical Iron Age Western Semitic religion, perhaps closely akin to that of their Judahite neighbors, which, with the loss of their native territory and national identity, adapted by adopting various elements from those groups with which they came into contact: Arabs, Judeans, Phoenicians, Greeks, and others. Throughout, it would seem that it was their loyalty to their god, Qaus, that became the focus of their identity as “Idumeans”—in this, too, their experience was perhaps similar to that of the people of Judah in their own exile. Once that loyalty was lost due to their absorption into Judaism, so was their identity as a distinct ethnicity.
There is still a lot that we do not know. We know nothing about the priests or other practitioners of the cult of Qaus. We know nothing about its places of worship.151 We also have no knowledge of the mythology, theology, or rituals professed and practiced by worshippers of Qaus. We can only hope that evidence for some of these will eventually turn up.
13. Postscript: Esau and Edom in Late Second Temple and in Rabbinic Judaism
Despite the assimilation of Idumea and its inhabitants into Judea towards the end of the second century BCE, and despite the huge influence that Herod and his descendants had on Judea, Jerusalem, and the Temple throughout the remaining 170 years of their existence and beyond, late Second Temple and Rabbinic Judaism essentially obfuscated any memory of the Idumeans. This can easily be seen in most of the late Second Temple period pseudoepigrapha. Besides the story of a conflict between Esau and Jacob in the Hebron area in Jubilees (esp. 37:1–38:14), which may reflect a pre-John Hyrcanus reality,152 the later pseudoepigrapha—such as the Testaments of the Twelve Tribes, 4 Ezra, 1 Enoch, and others mostly built upon the biblical depiction of the enmity between Edom and Israel—retrojected this enmity to the figure of Esau himself. Most scholars find very little historical value in these sources, beyond the very stereotype that they portray.153
The same stereotypical view of Edom can be seen in rabbinic literature. Again, taking its lead from the Bible, the rabbis used “Edom” as an epithet for Israel’s archenemy, first identified with Rome, and later, after the early fourth century CE, as a “code-name” for the Church. The many stories in Genesis Rabbah that feature the evil-doing Esau are a good example or how this negative view of “Edom” was projected onto the character of Edom’s eponymous ancestor.154
One excellent example of this “projection” of Esau’s “evil character” is in a story that has its origins in Gen. 50:1–13, in which Joseph and his brothers take the body of their father Jacob for burial in the Machpelah Cave in Hebron. According to Genesis Rabbah 97, BT Sotah 13a and several additional sources, Esau (or his sons) attempted to stop the burial, claiming ownership of the tomb. The much-later Targum Pseudo-Jonathan (on verse 13) expands on this:
When his [Jacob’s] sons carried him to the land of Canaan, Esau the wicked heard of the matter, and he set out from the mountains of Gabla with many legions and came to Hebron and would not allow Joseph to bury his father in the double cave. Then Naphtali went immediately, and running down to Egypt, he came (back) that same day. He brought the title deeds concerning the division of the double cave which Esau had written for Jacob his brother. And immediately Joseph beckoned to Hushim, son of Dan, who took a sword and cut off the head of Esau the wicked. Esau’s head went on rolling, until it went into the cave and rested in the bosom of Isaac his father. The sons of Esau buried his body in the field of the double (cave).155
So in the end, at least part of Esau ended up reunited with his twin Jacob, and the sons of Isaac and grandsons of Abraham were together again.
Funding
This research received no external funding.
Conflicts of Interest
The author declares no conflict of interest.
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1
For which, see (Shatzman 2013) and references therein.
2
The distinction in terminology between “Edomite” as referring to the Iron Age kingdom centered east of the Wadi ʿArabah and “Idumean” as referring to the region south of Judah in the Hellenistic period is a totally modern one, existing in neither ancient Hebrew nor Greek. Hebrew used אֱדוֹם, “Edom”, for both, while in Greek, the Septuagint often used Εδωμ, “Edom”, when referring to the descendants of Hσαυ, “Esau”, but usually used Ιδουμαίᾳ, “Idoumaia”, to refer to their kingdom. Josephus followed this, but also used “Idoumaia” when referring to the Hellenistic period province, as do other Hellenistic period sources (for which, see Marciak 2018a, 2019). In this paper, we shall refer to the Iron Age kingdom as “Edom”, to the Hellenistic period province as “Idumea”, but we shall also use the form “Edomite” to refer to ethnic Edomites residing in Persian and Hellenistic period Idumea.
3
For which, see recently (Eichler 2019).
4
On which, see (Bartlett 1977).
5
For a discussion of the way such relationships are reflected in biblical genealogies see (Tebes 2006).
6
For surveys see (Bartlett 1989, pp. 67–82; Levy 2009, p. 252; Lemaire 2010, p. 226).
7
In this article, we use the terms ʿArabah and Wadi ʿArabah in their modern sense, referring to the section of the Jordan Rift Valley that runs from the southern tip of the Dead Sea to the Gulf of Eilat/Aqaba, rather than in the biblical sense, in which “Arabah” usually refers to the section of the Rift that runs north of the Dead Sea.
8
(Vanderhooft 1995, p. 137). This is contrary to the claim by (Avi-Yonah 1977, p. 26), that they were “of Arabian stock”. For a rather forced return to this view of Edomites as Arabs see (Shahîd 2009).
9
(Rollston 2014).
10
For which, see (Bartlett 1989, pp. 115–28; Finkelstein 2005; Levy 2005) and references therein.
11
For which, see (Bartlett 1989, pp. 67–145; Bienkowski 1995; Beit Arieh 1995a). For a more recent short history of the Edomite kingdom, see (Lemaire 2010). For an analysis of the distinctive “Edomite pottery”, see (Thareani 2010).
12
(Bartlett 1989, pp. 128–45; Millard 1992).
13
(Dalley and Goguel 1997; Lemaire 2003, 2010, pp. 240–42).
14
(Aharoni 1979, p. 408), thought that Edom had “collapsed under pressure from the Nabataeans who had penetrated the southern regions of Transjordan”, while (Bartlett 1999, p. 105), attributed the “collapse and subsequent decay” of Edom to the disruption of trade following the destruction of Judah, rather than to a purposeful move by the Neo-Babyloneans. The Selaʿ carving seems to prove that the Edomite kingdom was purposely disbanded by Nabonidus, perhaps even after an armed struggle. See also (Crowell 2007).
15
(Bienkowski 1995, pp. 60–61), although in a later article (Bienkowski 2001), he cited some evidence of both Neo-Babylonian and Persian period rebuilding and occupation at Busayra (biblical Bozrah, the apparent capital of the Iron Age kingdom of Edom) at Tawilan and at Tell el-Kheleifah near Eilat/Aqaba. He then speculated that there could have been “some sort of political entity called Edom” throughout the Persian period, while at the same time admitting that “at present there is no evidence” of this. In light of the data collected here, we consider this to be very unlikely. HHh.
16
For a survey of relevant sources see (Bartlett 1989, pp. 168–72).
17
Bibliotheca Historica xix 94–95, 98 (actually quoting the third century Hieronymus of Cardia), although we should note that this reference is geographical, meant to elucidate the position of the “Asphaltic Lake” (the Dead Sea), and cannot be taken as proof that Idumea was already organized as a political unit by this time. For a discussion of this source see (Marciak 2018a, pp. 879–83).
18
See (Bartlett 1999, p. 106).
19
See (Beit Arieh 1995a, 2009).
20
For a brief overview see (Eph’al 2003). For the shrine at Qiṭmit see (Beit Arieh 1995b). For ʿEn Ḥaṣeva see (Cohen and Yisrael 1995). On the other hand, see the warning of (Bienkowski and Sedman 2001), against the “unrigorous” and “uncritical” use of the label “Edomite” for any particular aspects of material culture. They denied that ʿEn Ḥaṣeva was “Edomite” at all and question the “Edomite” identity of Qiṭmit as well.
21
(Beit Arieh 1995c), although one must admit that some of the readings would have probably not been understood as referring to Qaus if found in a different context.
22
See, for example, the spelling “Qaus” in (Knauf 1984a) contra “Qôs” in (Knauf 1999), although this probably had as much to do with editorial policy as it did with Knauf’s own preferences. On the other hand, (McCarter 1996, p. 36), followed by (Kelley 2009, p. 256), posited a diachronic differentiation, with “Qaus” being the pre-Persian period pronunciation and “Qôs” being used in later times.
23
(Naveh 2011, p. 227; Avigad and Sass 2011); allowing however that the seal may be even earlier than the seventh century.
24
(Thareani 2011, p. 304).
25
(Beit Arieh and Cresson 1985, pp. 96–101).
26
For the next such mentions, all from the first century and later, see (Bartlett 1989, p. 200).
27
(Naveh 1966). See also (Misgav 1990).
28
(Glueck 1941; Naveh 1966, pp. 28–30).
29
For example, (Beit Arieh 1996).
30
For which, see (Farisani 2010).
31
(Aharoni 1981, pp. 46–49, 70–74), although over the years there have been several other suggestions on the precise reading of no. 40. See for example (Na’aman 2011) and references there.
32
(Beit Arieh and Cresson 1991, p. 134). See also more recently (Becking and Dijkstra 2011).
33
See (Dykehouse 2013), contra (Guillaume 2013). For a more archaeologically nuanced view, see (Langgut and Lipschits 2017).
34
This is contrary to the rather innovative idea put forth by Bartlett (1999, pp. 112–13), according to which there was no ethnic or linguistic connection between the Iron Age Edomites and the later Idumeans, except their similar name, which in both cases was derived from the Hebrew “adamah”—meaning red, “terra rosa” soil.
35
This was first stated by (Eph’al 2003), and then expanded on by (Levin 2007, 2015).
36
For the coins of the neighboring provinces, see (Mildenberg 2000; Gerson 2001; Tal 2007, 2011). This is despite the suggestion by (Gitler et al. 2007), to identify a group of imageless-obverse coins found in the area as “Edomite”, precisely because they have no inscriptions or mint marks. They may indeed have been produced by someone in the area, but for them not to bear the mark of their minting authority would indicate that they were not minted by an official government body, Idumean or otherwise.
37
(Eph’al and Naveh 1996, p. 15). For the identification of Khirbet el-Kôm as Makkedah see (Dorsey 1980).
38
The connection between Nebaioth and the later Nabateans is often assumed, but is problematic; see (Eph’al 1982, pp. 221–23), who rejected it on both historical and linguistic grounds.
39
For which, see (Eph’al 1982, pp. 223–27; Bartlett 1989, pp. 168–72).
40
Following (Rabinowitz 1956; Dumbrell 1971), it has commonly been assumed that this Geshem and the biblical figure were one and the same, an assumption which (Eph’al 2017, pp. 484–86) has argued against.
41
Which (Lemaire 1974) has reconstructed as a previously unknown “ʿIyaš son of Maḥalai the king”.
42
(Eshel 2007b). One of these ostraca might even include the ethnonyms qdryn (“Qedarites”) and ‘rbyn (“Arabs”), although in (Eshel 2010, p. 62) she admits that the readings are problematic.
43
See (Zadok 1988; Eph’al 2017, pp. 482–84).
44
See also (Cruz-Uribe 2003) and references there.
45
(Luckenbill 1927, p. 220); see also (Eph’al 1982, pp. 137–42).
46
(Levin 2007, pp. 247–49). This, too, is not without precedent. From the Eshmunazar inscription, for example, we learn that “the Lord of Kings” (presumably the king of Persia) granted the areas of “Dor and Jaffa, great lands of grain that are in the field of Sharon” to the ruler of Sidon, “because of the great deeds which I have done”, apparently in aiding Persian naval operations; see (Galling 1963; Aharoni 1979, p. 415).
47
(Mildenberg 2000, pp. 95–96; Augé 2000).
48
(Mildenberg 1994).
49
For other views, see (Lemaire 1996, p. 148; Lemaire 2001, p. 111; Sapin 2004; Edelman 2005, pp. 271–75).
50
Diodorus xvii 48; Arrian, Anabasis, ii 25–26; Quintius Curtius iv 6; Strabo, 16.2.30, writes that “the city was razed to the ground by Alexander and remains uninhabited”; see also (Devine 1984; Giroud 2000).
51
(Mildenberg 2000, p. 96).
52
(Eph’al 2003, p. 79; 2017, p. 482; Levin 2007, 2015).
53
(Hodos 2010, pp. 10–13), has pointed out the problems inherent in any definition of “ethnicity” vs. “race”, both of which may differ if discussed through emic (that is “inside”) or etic (“external”) perspectives.
54
See, for example, (Meskell 2001, especially pp. 188–90; Lucy 2005) and references there.
55
See (Stern 2001, pp. 443–54), and further summaries in (Stern 2007, pp. 206–8; Fantalkin and Tal 2012) and references therein.
56
For a recollection of the original “discovery” and publication of the latter, see (Porten and Yardeni 2006). The publication of unprovenanced artifacts, including inscriptions, has been seen as problematic by the scholarly community, on both scientific (problems of authenticity and context) and moral (encouraging theft and illegal sale) grounds; see (Rollston 2003, 2005; Vaughn 2005). However see (Porten and Yardeni 2007a) for their reasons for treating this as a special case. For a more recent summary see (Porten and Yardeni 2014, pp. xv–xxii). For an ostracon, which obviously belongs to the same corpus, that was found in a controlled excavation at Ḥorvat Naḥal Yatir and actually mentions the site of Makkedah, see (Vainstub and Fabian 2015).
57
(Naveh 1979, p. 182; Naveh 1981, p. 153; Eshel 2010, 2014).
58
See (Porten and Yardeni 2008).
59
(Aḥituv and Yardeni 2004, p. 19). Unfortunately, the specific year of his reign was not preserved.
60
(Fantalkin and Tal 2012).
61
For example, (Stern 2019, pp. 35–36).
62
A nice example of which is the Ostracon found at Tell el-Farʿah (south), originally published by Cowley and the re-read by (Naveh 1985, pp. 114–16), as referring to sowing barley in a field.
63
This from (Zadok 1988, p. 814).
64
For a list of linguistic features that can be defined as “Arabic”, see (Eph’al 2017, pp. 182–83).
65
For a short discussion of the theoretical aspects of this assumption, see (Porten 2005, pp. 105*–108*) and references there.
66
For a general discussion of theophoric personal names and their distribution in the Iron Age II, see (Golub 2014).
67
(Naveh 1981, p. 167).
68
Following this, (Eshel and Zissu 2006) speculated that Jews made up a significant part of the troops commanded by the Qedarites in the area, perhaps explaining the interest of “Geshem the Arab” in the affairs of the Jerusalem Temple, as recounted in Nehemiah 4 and 6. We should note, however, that if one follows the traditional mid-fifth century date for Nehemiah (for which see Demsky 1994) this would have been about a century earlier than the Arad Aramaic ostraca.
69
For bgn, see (Naveh 1979, p. 194); for dlwy see (Naveh 1981, p. 176).
70
(Eshel 2007b).
71
(Eshel 2007c).
72
The vast majority of which are attributed to Khirbet el-Kôm/Makkedah.
73
(Stern 2007, pp. 212–13).
74
However, as emphasized by (Dearman 1995, p. 121), the very “equation of Qos and Edom is essentially part of a circular argument (Qos = Edom; Edomite = Qos veneration)”.
75
(Oded 1971; Knauf 1984b, 1999, pp. 674–75).
76
(Dearman 1995, p. 123). In note 8 there he added: “Given the particularities of rendering foreign terms in Egyptian syllabic orthography, perhaps all that can be said about these four names is that the interpretation proposed by Oded and Knauf is grammatically possible”.
77
For which, see (Bartlett 1989, pp. 204–5).
78
This may be reflected in the biblical tradition of ‘Edom’/Esau’s being a hunter, as in Genesis 25:27; 27:3–4.
79
(Vriezen 1965).
80
Erlich dated these figurines typologically to the late Iron Age or the Persian period and discussed Assyrian, Phoenician, and Achaemenid parallels to their iconography. See (Erlich 2006 and plates 1–3; 2013).
81
(Knauf 1984a, 1999, pp. 676–77).
82
(Zalcman 2005).
83
“The Lord came from Sinai; He shone upon them from Seir; He appeared from Mount Paran” (Deut. 33:2); “O Lord, when You came forth from Seir, Advanced from the country of Edom” (Judges 5:4); “God is coming from Teman, The Holy One from Mount Paran” (Hab. 3:3); “Who is this coming from Edom, In crimsoned garments from Bozrah” (Isaiah 63:3). Psalm 68:8–9, 18 also uses Sinai imagery, but does not refer specifically to Edom.
84
For “YHWH Teman” in the Kuntillet ʿAjrud inscriptions see (Aḥituv et al. 2012, pp. 95–100, 105–7).
85
See (Rose 1977; Axelsson 1987, pp. 48–80; Knauf 1999, p. 677; Amzallag 2009, pp. 390–92). (Hanley 2007) has even argued that Jeremiah’s oracle against Edom (49:7–22) should be interpreted as signifying that Edom had sinned against Yahweh—meaning that Edom had been in a covenant with Yahweh, just as Israel had been!
86
See, for example, (Cornell 2016; Levin 2014). For the idea of a “national god” in nearby Ammon, see (Tyson 2019, pp. 3–7; Bienkowski and Sedman 2001, p. 322), who have raised the possibility that Qiṭmit was actually used by “Judahites worshipping Qos” (italics in original), while (Kelley 2009, pp. 265–70) suggested that Qaus and Yahweh were originally two epithets of the same deity, worshipped by the Kenites, the Kenizzites, the Calebites, the Midianites, and the other southern tribes that eventually came together to form the tribe/kingdom of Judah, but subsequently “the Qos aspect of Yahweh was eventually lost, or perhaps censored, in the official religion of Judah”.
87
This despite Knauf’s attempt to establish continuity between Edomite Qaus and the Nabatean deity Dushara—see (Knauf 1999, p. 676; Dearman 1995, pp. 124–25).
88
(Knauf 1999, p. 676).
89
(Naveh 1979, p. 195).
90
(Porten 2005, p. 112*).
91
(Porten 2005, p. 118*).
92
Each of which has variable spellings; see (Porten and Yardeni 2006, 2007b) and more.
93
(Porten and Yardeni 2004, 2009). However, see (Notarius 2018), who has suggested that these names be understood, not as “clans” but as “collective clients”, while also admitting that a person who was authorized to deal in the name of such a “collective” may well have been a member of the family.
94
However, a word of caution is in order. As pointed out by (Naveh 1979, p. 195), based on Qaus-theophoric names with Arabic elements found at Beer-sheba, it is possible that some worshippers of Qaus were ethnic Arabs.
95
(Stern 2007, pp. 216–21).
96
(Porten and Yardeni 2014, p. 128).
97
(Porten and Yardeni 2014, pp. 222–24).
98
(Porten and Yardeni 2003, p. 212).
99
(Stern 2007, pp. 216–21).
100
(Lemaire 2004, 2006, pp. 416–17).
101
Interestingly enough, only one of the four, Šmryh, has the expected post-exilic Yh. The other three, Ywʾ[b] (or Ywʾ[š]), ʿbdyw and Ṭbyw, have the typically pre-exilic Israelean Yw, as in the Samaria Ostraca or Kuntillet ʿAjrud. (Eshel 2010, p. 61), takes note of this but does not offer an explanation.
102
Although (Eshel 2010, pp. 44, 62) admits that all three of these readings are problematic.
103
(Erlich 2006, 2013).
104
(Wolff et al. 2018).
105
See, for example, (Eshel 2007a). For the differences between Samaria and Idumea see (Levin 2012).
106
(Geraty 1975).
107
For a summary, see (Horowitz 1980).
108
(Horowitz 1980, p. 104).
109
(Kloner 2001, pp. 111–12).
110
(Stern 2014, pp. 1–2; Gera 2014).
111
See (Perry-Gal 2014) and references there.
112
(Perry-Gal 2019, p. 207).
113
(Eshel and Langlois 2019).
114
(Stern 2019, pp. 88–100).
115
(Stern 2012, pp. 11–15) mentioned 18 stone phalli and one ceramic one. Three additional stone phalli were discovered subsequently, while the “ceramic phallus” turned out to be a finger. My thanks to Dr. Ian Stern for the updated information, and for additional helpful comments on an early draft of this paper.
116
(Erlich 2019, p. 228).
117
See (Stern 2012, 2019, pp. 101–6).
118
(Ambar-Armon 2019, pp. 133–46, 163–64).
119
(Ecker 2019, p. 275).
120
(Erlich 2014). See also (Erlich 2019).
121
(Kloner 2011, pp. 570–71). These figures are very different from the bearded male hunters, which Erlich suggested represented Qaus, but if indeed both groups do represent the Edomite god, it is possible that different sectors within Idumean society had different perceptions of the deity, or that these perceptions became more aniconic over time.
122
(Eshel 2007a, p. 123).
123
(Eshel 2014).
124
(Eshel and Langlois 2019, p. 222).
125
(Ecker and Korzakova 2014).
126
(Ecker 2019).
127
(Ecker and Eckhardt 2018).
128
(Eshel and Kloner 1996).
129
(Stern 2007, p. 221). (Wolff et al. 2018, pp. 37–40) emphasized the increase in Phoenician influence in the Hellenistic period, even speculating on the existence of a Sidonian πολιτευμα (politeuma), an official recognized “polity”, such as were known to exist at other cities.
130
(Kloner 2011, pp. 565–69).
131
(Finkelsztejn 1998, pp. 47–48; Reich 2013, pp. 50–51). However, newer archaeological analysis has shown that there are virtually no signs of any settlement, Jewish or otherwise, after 107 BCE.
132
(Adler 2018). Also worth noting is the comment made by (Stern 2012, p. 17), that such installations may have been used for both ritual and profane purposes. Stern also cited (Miller 2010), who discussed the use of such finds as “identity markers” in general.
133
See (Faust 2015). For just a few of the many studies of circumcision among Israel’s neighbors, see (Sasson 1966; Steiner 1999; King 2006; Wyatt 2009).
134
For an assessment of Antiochus’ “decrees” and their effect on the Jews, see (Doran 2011).
135
(Stern 2012, pp. 18–19).
136
(Stern and Noam 2015).
137
(Eshel et al. 2007; Amzallag 2015) has gone so far as to credit “Edomite Ezrahites” with responsibility for much of biblical wisdom literature and poetry. On the other hand, see (Crowell 2008) for an opposing view.
138
(Ecker and Korzakova 2014, p. 96).
139
(Kasher 1988, pp. 46–48), pointed out the problem of trusting Strabo on the Idumeans’ “joining” the Jews, where he was wrong about their origin, although he was correct in that they came from what in his time was “Nabatea”. For further discussion of this passage, see (Marciak 2018a, pp. 883–87).
140
Albeit with no actual destruction layer; see (Stern and Noam 2015, p. 356).
141
While it is true that Josephus (Ant. 13.318–319), ostensibly quoting Strabo who was quoting Timagenes, claimed that Hyrcanus’ son Judah Aristobulus I forced the Itureans in the Galilee to convert, much in the way Josephus claimed that Hyrcanus forced the Idumeans, it has long been accepted by many scholars that, like in the case of the Idumeans, Josephus was repeating anti-Hasmonean propaganda. See (Kasher 1988, pp. 39–45; Dar 1991).
142
For whom see (Appelbaum 2009).
143
(Kasher 1988, pp. 46–74). For the opposing view, that the Idumeans’ conversion to Judaism was at least partially forced, see (Shatzman 2005, 2012; Schwartz 2009; Rappaport 2009, 2013), following Kasher, who suggested both that the Hasmoneans dealt differently with the Hellenized urban Idumeans than with the rural families, many of whom would have been willing to accept Judaism “out of common hostility to the Hellenistic cities and Seleucid rule”, and that in general it was only the clan leaders who were forced to actively undertake to keep the laws of Judaism; the rest of the population was simply supposed to follow suit.
144
(Stern 2012, pp. 25–26).
145
(Ben-Shlomo 2018) and references there. On p. 52* Ben-David suggested that Hebron “was possibly inhabited by Edomites who were converted to Judaism by John Hyrcanus earlier during the Hasmonean period”, but offered no further discussion of the matter.
146
(Rappaport 1969; Marciak 2018a, pp. 892–93). For more on the Idumean community in Ptolemaic Egypt, see (Thompson Crawford 1984).
147
But see (Schwartz 2009), who claimed that the identification of this Joseph as an actual paternal uncle of Herod’s is a modern error.
148
That is, the sites’ being built by Herod; the sites themselves are mentioned many times. For one example, see Josephus, Wars 4.531. For archaeological and historical surveys of both sites, see (Magen 2003, 2008; Netzer 2006, pp. 228–32).
149
(Magen 2003, pp. 255–56), mentions an altar with the name “Kos” inscribed in Greek that was found at Mamre, but does not offer a specific date or context.
150
(Arnon 2009, p. 125).
151
(Steiner 2019, pp. 9–10), recently listed only one “possibly cultic building” at Iron Age Buseira, no such structures at all are known from Persian-period Idumea, and the presumed temples at Hellenistic Mareshah were probably part of the Ptolemaic and then Seleucid state cultic apparatus.
152
For which, see (Livneh 2014; Marciak 2018b, pp. 169–78).
153
See (Marciak 2018b) and the many references therein.
154
For the rabbis’ negative view of Esau in general, with a focus on Genesis Rabbah, see (Langer 2010).
155
See translation and references in (Maher 1992, pp. 164–65). Maher (p. 12) accepts the opinions of those scholars who believe that in its present form, Targum Pseudo-Jonathan “cannot be dated before the seventh or eighth century”.
© 2020 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Levin, Y. The Religion of Idumea and Its Relationship to Early Judaism. Religions 2020, 11, 487. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100487
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Levin Y. The Religion of Idumea and Its Relationship to Early Judaism. Religions. 2020; 11(10):487. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100487
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Levin, Yigal. 2020. “The Religion of Idumea and Its Relationship to Early Judaism” Religions 11, no. 10: 487. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100487
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