All this out of Notitia.
2. Zin. Cadesh.
These places are named in the line bounding the land southward. Numbers 34 and Joshua
15.
The Jews teach us, that it was called the 'Desert of Zin' from a mountain of that name,
and that the mountain was so called from the groves of palm-trees; and that it was
famous for iron mines. For those words, Numbers 34:4, "And pass on to Zin," are
rendered by the Jerusalem Targumist, "And the border passed on to the mountain of
Iron." By Jonathan, "And passed on to the palms of the mountain of Iron"...
It seems, therefore, to be some mountainous tract, very near to the borders of the land
of Israel, famous for palms of a lower size, and iron-mines, called, from its palm-trees, Tsin,
and from that name giving a denomination to the adjacent country, which was desert.
Cadesh, in the eastern interpreters Rekam, was a bound of the land; yet Cadesh
itself was, in effect, without the land. Hence those words, "He that brings a bill
from a heathen place, &c.; yea, that brings it from Rekam." And, "All the
spots that come from Rekam are clean." The Gloss is, "Some spots in the
garments" (namely, of a profluvious woman) "which came from Rekam were clean,
because they determined not of the spots of strangers." Another Gloss thus: "In
Rekam were Israelites; and yet spots coming from Rekam are clean, because they belong to
Israelites, and the Israelites hide their spots," &c.
Cades, as Bridenbachius relates, is called Cawatha by the Arabians: for thus he writes;
"At length we came into a certain country, which, in the Arabian tongue, is called
Cawatha, but in the Latin Cades." Which while we read, those things come into my mind
which the eminent Edward Pocock, a man of admirable learning, discourseth concerning the
word Kawa, in his very learned Miscellaneous Notes, that it should signify crying
aloud, an outcry, &c. To which whether the word Gohe and (whereby Rekam is
also called) bellowing, may any way answer, it is more fit for that great oracle of
tongues to judge than for so mean a man as I am.
3. Ono.
"Ono was distant three miles from Lydda. R. Jacob Ben Dositheus said, From
Lydda to Ono are three miles; and I, on a certain time, went thither before daybreak, up
to the ankles in honey of figs." R. Simai and R. Zadok went to intercalate the year
in Lydda, and kept the Sabbath in Ono.
The Talmudists suppose this city was walled down from the days of Joshua; but fired in
the war of Gibeah: because it is said, "All the cities also, to which they came, they
set on fire," Judges 20:48; but that it was rebuilt by Elpaal, a Benjamite, 1
Chronicles 8:12; "R. Lazar Ben R. Josah saith, It was destroyed in the days of the
concubine in Gibeah; but Elpaal stood forth and repaired it."
With Lod and Ono is also joined "The valley of craftsmen," Nehemiah 11:35;
which some of the Jews suppose to be a particular city; and that it was walled from the
days of Joshua. "But saith R. Chananiah, in the name of R. Phineas, Lod and Ono themselves
are the valley of craftsmen." That R. Chananiah was a citizen of the city of
Ono, eminent among the Rabbins, "one of the five learned who judged before the
wise men. These were Ben Azzai, Ben Zuma, Chanan, and Chananiah, and Ben Nanas."
Why the maps placed Lod and Ono near Jordan, not far from Jericho, I can meet with no
other reason than that in Josephus is found the town Adida, not far from thence, and Hadid
is reckoned with Lod and Ono in Ezra 2:33; and Lod and Hadid are framed into one word Lodadi,
Ezra 2:33, and Lodadid, Nehemiah 7:37, by the Seventy interpreters. But there were
more places called by the name of Adida; so that that reason fails, if that were the
reason. For there was 'Adida in Sephel,' ('Adida in the valley'); and
"The city Adida in the mountain; under which lie the plains of Judea."
And "Adida in Galilee before the great plain," if it were not the same with
"Adida in Sephel."
Of Lydda, which we are now near when we are speaking of Ono, let that be considered,
for the sake of young students, which the Gloss adviseth, That Lydda is called also Lodicea:
and frequent mention is made of "the martyrs in Lydda," which is sometimes also
pronounced "the martyrs in Lodicea"; as in that story among other places;
"When the tyrant [or Trajan] endeavoured to kill Lolienus [perhaps Julianus]
and Papus his brother in Lodicea, &c." [the Gloss, Lodicea, that
is, Lydda] "he said to them, If you are of the people of Ananias, Michael, and
Azarias, let your God come, and deliver you out of my hand."
The martyrdom of these brethren is much celebrated, which they underwent for the king's
daughter, who was found slain; and the enemies of the Jews said that the Jews had slain
her; and these brethren, to deliver Israel, said, 'We slew her'; therefore those alone the
king slew. So the Gloss...
Chapter 10
Of the various inhabitants of the land.
1. It was the land of the Hebrews before it was the Canaanites'.
Abraham is called Hebrew, then only when the difference between him and the
Elamites was to be decided by war. And the reason of the surname is to be fetched from the
thing itself which then was transacted.
I. The hereditary right of the Holy Land, which, by divine disposal, was Sem's land,
Elam, the first-born of Sem, did deservedly claim; nor was there any of the sons of Sem
upon whom, in human judgment, it was more equally and justly devolved. But the divine
counsel and judgment had designed it another way; namely, that it should come to the
family of Arphaxad, and Heber, of which family Abraham was. Him, therefore, God
strengtheneth against the army of Elam, and declares him heir by a stupendous victory;
which Sem himself likewise does, blessing him, although he had overthrown in battle his
sons the Elamites, born of his first-born Elam. For that most holy man, and a very great
and noble prophet withal, acknowledged the counsel of God; whom he is so far from opposing
for the slaughter of his sons, that, on the contrary, he blesseth the conqueror, and
yields him the choicest fruits of his land, bread and wine, not only for refreshment to
him and his soldiers, but also, perhaps, for a sign rather of resignation, and investing
him with the hereditary right of it, whom God, by so signal a mark, had shown to be the
heir. Upon very good reason, therefore, Abraham is called Hebrew, to point as it
were with the finger, that God would derive the inheritance of that land from the family
of Elam to the family of Heber, from the first-born to him that was born after; which was
also done afterward with Reuben and Joseph.
II. It neither ought, nor indeed can be passed over without observation, that the
country of Pentapolis, and the countries adjacent, were subjects and tributaries to
Chedorlaomer king of Elam. What! was there any part of the land of Canaan subject to the
king of the Persians, when so many kings and countries lay between it and Persia? No idle
scruple and difficulty, I assure you; nor, as far as I can see, any otherwise to be
resolved, than that Elam, the first-born of Sem, or Melchisedek, by his birthright, was
heir of that land, which his father Sem possessed by divine right and patent; and the sons
of Elam also held after him, and his grandsons, unto Chedorlaomer. For when it is said
that those cities and countries had served Chedorlaomer twelve years, the times of
his reign seem rather to be reckoned than the years of the reign of the Elamites. Not that
those nations were subject to the sceptre of the Elamites twelve years only, but that that
year was only the twelfth of Chedorlaomer. But now God translates the inheritance to the
family of Heber, called Hebrew before, but now more particularly, and more honourably,
since, of all the families of Sem, that was now most eminent. Heber denotes
Hebrews, as Assur denotes Assyrians, in those words of Balaam, Numbers 24:24,
"and shall afflict Assur, and shall afflict Heber."
It is a dream of somebody among the Rabbins, "That, when the whole land was
divided among the seventy nations at the confusion of tongues, the land of Canaan came to
none: therefore the Canaanites betook themselves thither; and being found not only empty,
but conferred by lot upon none, they usurped it for their own."
But what then shall we say of Melchizedek, whom now all acknowledge for Shem? Which is
more probable, that he intruded among the Canaanites, now inhabiting the land, or that
they intruded upon him? Was not that land hereditary to him and his, rather than usurped
by wrong and intrusion? And did not he, by the direction of the Spirit of God, betake
himself thither, rather than either that he, wandering about uncertainly, lighted upon
that land by chance, or, acted by a spirit of ambition or usurpation, violently possessed
himself of it? For my part, I scarcely believe, either that the Canaanites went thither
before the confusion of tongues, or that Shem, at that time, was not there: but that he
had long and fully inhabited the land of Canaan (as it was afterward called),
before the entrance of the Canaanites into it: and that by the privilege of a divine
grant, which had destined him and his posterity hither: and that afterward the Canaanites
crept in here; and were first subjects to the family of Shem, whose first-born was Elam,
but at length shook off the yoke.
When, therefore, all those original nations, from the confusion of tongues, partook of
their names immediately from the fathers of their stock; as, the Assyrians from Assur, the
Elamites from Elam, &c.; the same we must hold of the Hebrew nation, namely, that it,
from that time, was called Hebrew from Heber: and that it was called the land of the
Hebrews, before it was called the land of the Canaanites. For I can neither think that the
stock of the Hebrews had no name for almost three hundred years after the confusion of
tongues, until the passing of Abraham out of Chaldea found a name for it, which some would
have; nor methinks is it agreeable that Abraham was therefore called Hebrew,
because, travelling out of Chaldea into the land of Canaan, he passed Euphrates;
when, upon the same reason, both Canaan himself, and the fathers of all the western
nations almost, should be called Hebrews; for they passed over Euphrates, traveling
out of Chaldea. And when the patriarch Joseph himself is called by his mistress a
"Hebrew servant," Genesis 39:17, and so called by the servants of Pharaoh,
chapter 41:12; and when he saith of himself, that he was stolen away "out of the land
of the Hebrews," Genesis 40:15,--it is scarcely probable that that whole land was
known to other countries under that name, only for one family now dwelling there; and that
family a stranger, a traveller, and living in danger from the inhabitants: but rather that
it was known by that name from ancient ages, even before it was called "The land of
the Canaanites." Nor, if we should raise a contest against that opinion, which
asserts that the language of the Canaanites and the Hebrews was one and the same, would
that argument any whit move us, that the towns and cities of the Canaanites bore names
which were also Hebrew; for those their Hebrew names they might receive from Shem, Heber,
and their children, before they were places of the Canaanites.
Heber lived when the tongues were confounded, and the nations scattered; and when none
denied that the sons of Heber were Hebrews, (yea, who would deny that that land was the
land of Heber?) by what reason should not they and that nation take their name from him,
after the same manner as other nations took theirs from their father, at the confusion of
languages?
2. Whence Canaan was a part only of Canaan, Judges 4:2.
Canaan with his people wandering from Babylon after the confusion of languages, passed
over Euphrates through Syria, and travelled towards Palestine, and the way led him
straight into the northern part of it first. And that which the Jews say of Abraham
travelling thither, may be said of this person also in this regard: "God said to
Abraham (say they), To thee, to thee; the words being doubled by reason of a double
journey, one from Aram Naharaim, the other from Aram Nachor. While Abraham lived in Aram
Naharaim, and Aram Nachor, he saw men eating, drinking, and playing: he said therefore,
Let not my portion be in that land. But after he came to the ladder of the Tyrians,
he saw men labouring in digging their grounds, in gathering their vintage, and in
husbandry: and then he said, Let my portion be in this land."
Note, how Abraham coming into the land of Canaan is first brought into the north part
of it; for there was 'Scala Tyriorum,' 'The ladder of the Tyrians.' Canaan, in like manner
with his sons, travelling from Babylon went the same way, and possesseth first the north
parts, both those that were without the land of Canaan, and those that were parts of the
land of Canaan itself.
First, let the seats of these his four sons without the land of Canaan be observed.
I. Arvadi, the Arvadites. Which word in all versions almost is read as Aradi,
the Aradites. And their seats are easily discovered in Arad and Antarad. Jonathan for Arvadi,
the Arvadites, reads [Lutasi] the Lutasites. Which people in what part of the world
were they? When I search in the Aruch what the word Lutas means, he cites these
words out of Bereshith Rabba; "A certain woman of the family of Tiberinus was
married to one Lutas": and when, accordingly, I search Bereshith Rabba, I find
it there written, "She was married to a certain robber"...
II. Zemari, the Zemarites. In the Targumists, both that of Jerusalem and of
Jonathan, it is Chamatsi. So it is in the Arabic, and in the Jerusalem Gemarists;
and also in Bereshith Rabba; which either supposeth them called Zemarites, or alludes to
the word..."because they wrought in Zemar, woolen manufacture." But
'Chamats' and 'Apamia' are convertible terms in the Jerusalem Talmudists: "The sea of
Apamia (say they) is the sea of Chamats." But not that Apamia we show elsewhere is
the same with Sepham; on the utmost coast of the land of Israel, north and northeast.
III. Arki, the Arkites. "Arki is Arcas of Libanus." Pliny writes thus;
"Paneas, in which is Caesarea with the spring before spoken, Abila, Arca,"
&c. Borchard thus, "On [or rather between] the borders of Libanus
and Antilibanus, we found the strong-hold Arachas, and built by Aracheus the son of
Canaan, when the deluge was over."
IV. Hamathi, the Hamathites. In the Jerusalem Targum it is Antioch. And
Bereshith Rabba not much from that sense, though in very different words, "A
Sinite (saith he) and Arethusia; Chamathi is Epiphania." Thus Pliny;
"The rest of Syria hath these people, except what shall be said with Euphrates, the
Arethusians, the Bereans, and the Epiphanians."
You see the Antiochian and Syrophoenician Syria possessed by the Canaanites; and yet we
are not come as far as the land of Canaan.
Let us therefore proceed onwards with Canaan and the rest of his sons. The borders of
the Canaanites, saith the Holy Scripture, "were from Sidon to Gerar, even unto
Gaza," Genesis 10:19. You will say they were from Antioch, and utmost Phoenicia, and
a great part of Syria. True, indeed, those countries, as we have seen, were planted by the
sons of Canaan, but the Scripture doth not call them Canaanites; but where their coasts
end towards the south, there the Canaanites' begin. The tract therefore, or region first
possessed by them, is called by a peculiar name Canaan, as distinct from the rest
of the land of Canaan, Judges 4:2; where "Jabin the king of Hazor" is called
"the king of Canaan," that is, of the northern coast of the land of Canaan. And
among the seven nations devoted by God himself to a curse and cutting-off, the Canaanites
are always numbered, when all indeed were Canaanites: and that, as it seems, upon a double
reason; partly, because that country was distinctly so called, as another country, and was
of a peculiar difference from those countries inhabited by the sons of Canaan, of whom we
have spoke: partly, because Canaan the father probably fixed his seat there himself; and
thence both that country was called Canaan, and the whole land moreover called "The
land of Canaan."
3. The Perizzites, who.
Reckon the sons of Canaan in Genesis 10; and where do you find the Perizzites? And yet,
a matter to be wondered at, they are always numbered in that black catalogue of the seven
nations to be cut off.
I know it is supposed by some that they are called Perizzites, as much as to say
villagers, because they dwelt in villages, and small towns unfortified:
which, indeed, varies not much from the derivation of the word: but certainly it is
needless, when all the Canaanitish families are reckoned up, which possessed the whole
land, to add the villagers over and above, who were sufficiently included in the
aforesaid reckoning.
But that which we know was done by the Israelites, we justly suppose was done by the
Canaanites also; namely, that some families of the Canaanite stock were denominated, not
from the very immediate son of Canaan, from whom they derived their original, but from
some famous and memorable man of that stock. Nor do we say this upon conjecture alone, but
by very many examples among the Israelites; and, indeed, among other nations, and this in
that very nation of which we are speaking. In Genesis 36, Zibeon was the son of Seir,
verse 20; and the whole nation and land was called, "The nation and land of the sons
of Seir." But now that that Seir was of the Canaanite pedigree, appears sufficiently
hence, that his son Zibeon was called a Hivite, verse 2. After the same manner therefore
as the Seirites, who were of Canaanite blood, were so named, I make no doubt the
Perizzites were named from one Perez, a man of great name in some Canaanite stock.
4. The Kenites.
Of the same rank were the Kenites, the Kenizzites, Cadmonites: by original indeed
Canaanites, but so named from some Cain, and Kenaz, and Cadmon, men of famous renown in
those families. If so be the Cadmonites were not so called from their antiquity, or rather
from their habitation eastward: which is the derivation of Saracens; from Saracon,
the east.
The masters of the traditions do not agree among themselves what to resolve concerning
these nations. In the Jerusalem Talmudists you have these passages: "Your fathers
possessed seven nations, but you shall possess the land of ten nations. The three last are
these, the Kenites, the Kenizzites, the Cadmonites. R. Judah saith, These are the
Salmeans, the Sabeans, and the Nabatheans. R. Simeon saith, Asia...and Damascus. R. Lazar
Ben Jacob saith, Asia and Carthagena, and Turkey. Rabbi saith, Edom and Moab, and the
firstfruits of the children of Ammon."
In the Babylonian Talmudists these passages: "Samuel saith, All that land which
God shewed to Moses, is bound to tithes. To exclude what? To exclude the Kenites, the
Kenizzites, the Cadmonites. A tradition. R. Meir saith, These are the Naphtuchites, the
Arabians, and the Salmeans. R. Judah saith, Mount Seir, Ammon, and Moab. R. Simeon
saith...Asia and Spain."
"These nations were not delivered to Israel in this age; but they shall be
delivered in the days of the Messias."
"In the days of the Messias they shall add three other cities of refuge. But
whence? From the cities of the Kenites, the Kenizzites, and the Cadmonites. Concerning
whom God gave a promise to our father Abraham; but they are not as yet subdued."
We may borrow light concerning these nations from those words of Moses, Genesis 10:18,
"Afterward the families of the Canaanites were dispersed." First they
replenished Phoenicia, and the northern country of the land of Canaan; by little and
little, the whole land of Canaan within Jordan. Then they spread themselves into the land
which afterwards belonged to the Edomites, and there they were called Horites from mount
Hor; and the children of Seir, from Seir the father of those families, he himself being a
Canaanite. On the east, they spread themselves into those countries which afterward
belonged to the Moabites, the Ammonites, the Midianites; and they were called Kenites,
Kenizzites, Cadmonites, from one Cain, one Kenaz, and perhaps one Cadmon, the fathers of
those families; if so be the Cadmonites were not so called from the aforesaid causes.
The mention of a certain Cain calls to my mind the town or city Cain, which you see in
the maps placed not far from Carmel: in that of Doet, adorned (shall I say?) or disfigured
with a Dutch picture of one man shooting another, with this inscription, "Cain was
shot by Lamech," Genesis 4. A famous monument forsooth! That place, indeed, is
obscure, Genesis 4: and made more obscure by the various opinions of interpreters: and
you, Doet, have chosen the worst of all. If the words of Lamech may be cleared from the
text, (and if you clear it not from the context, whence will you clear it?) they carry
this plain and smooth sense with them: He had brought in bigamy: that also had laid waste
the whole world, Genesis 6. For so wretched a wickedness, and which, by his example, was
the destruction of infinite numbers of men, divine justice and vengeance strikes and
wounds him with the horror and sting of conscience; so that, groaning and howling before
his two bigamous wives, Adah and Zillah, he complains and confesseth that he is a much
more bloody murderer than Cain, for he had only slain Abel; but he, an infinite number of
young and old by his wicked example.