Philistines
Philistines
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Philistines
The Philistines (Hebrew pelishtim) were a non-Semitic people who settled in the southern coastal
area of Canaan, which became known as Philistia (Hebrew pelesheth). They are well known from
the Old Testament for often warring with the Israelites.
Name
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The etymology of the word “Philistines” is unknown, though it is doubtless of Indo-European
origin. Already in the 12th century BCE the Egyptian Pharaoh Rameses III knows them as
the plst, and later the Assyrians called Philistia Palashtu or Pilistu. In the Septuagint Old
Testament the word “Philistines” is often rendered “foreigners” (Greek allophuloi), though in
the Pentateuch and Joshua it is transliterated as Phulistim or suchlike.
Origin
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There is a general consensus that the Philistines originally came from the Aegean area. Various
aspects of their material culture support this. For example, the earliest Philistine pottery is
continuous with Mycenaean (Late Helladic) IIIC pottery. The Old Testament is more specific,
claiming several times that the Philistines came from Caphtor (Jer 47:4; Amos 9:7;
compare Gen 10:14 [according to some translations]; Deut 2:23), which is widely believed to
denote Crete, the inhabitants of which were called Keftiu by the ancient Egyptians. Note, for
example, that the kilted Keftiu depicted bearing tribute in the Egyptian tomb of the vizier
Rekhmire in Thebes (ca. 1450 BCE) strongly resemble the Cretans represented in the palace of
Knossos in Crete. Again, in the anti-Philistine oracles in Ezek 25:16 and Zeph 2:5, they are called
Cherethites (Cretans).
Outside the Bible the Philistines (plst) are first mentioned in Rameses III’s mortuary temple at
Medinet Habu (in Thebes) as one of the sea peoples (alongside the Tjeker, Shekelesh, Denyen,
and Weshesh) whom the Egyptians defeated in a sea and land battle in the king’s eighth year, ca.
1175 BCE. This migration of sea peoples was part of the turmoil occurring in the Near East at the
end of the Late Bronze Age. In Rameses III’s temple the Philistines are depicted wearing a
distinctive plumed helmet or feathered headdress. (Interestingly, a similar plumed head-dressed
person is attested as one of the signs on the Phaistos disk from Crete dating from ca. 1600 BCE.)
Shortly after their defeat by the Egyptians, the Philistines settled down on the southern coast of
Canaan, where they are well attested archaeologically from the 12th century BCE onwards.
Certain Cypriot aspects of their material culture suggest that some Philistines may have reached
Canaan via Cyprus; compare Num 24:24, “ships shall come forth from Kittim [Cyprus] and
afflict…Eber [the Hebrews].”
Territory
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Philistia was in a fertile plain, though there were some sand dunes in the south. It extended from
Joppa in the north to Wadi Ghazzeh (south of Gaza) in the south, and the Philistines often
attempted to extend beyond this region. However, the Old Testament singles out five cities within
Philistia as being especially associated with the Philistines. These are Ashdod, Ashkelon, Gaza,
Ekron, and Gath. The names of the first three are still preserved in the modern towns, while the
fourth, Ekron, is confidently equated with Tel Miqne. Gath is now generally equated with Tell es-
Safi. The first three cities are near the coast and the other two are further inland in the area known
as the Shephelah. The fact that part of the Promised Land remained in the hands of the Philistines
is “anticipated” in Noah’s blessing of Japheth (ancestor of the Mediterranean races) in Gen 9:27,
“May God make space for Japheth, and let him live in the tents of Shem,” Shem as its ancestor
symbolizing Israel.
Religion
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The Philistines took over the worship of certain Canaanite deities, just as the Israelites often did.
In particular, Dagon, a god of fertility (compare Hebrew dagan, “corn”), is singled out for special
mention, with temples at Gaza and Ashdod (Judg 16:23; 1 Sam 5:2-5). A Dagon temple at
Ashdod (Azotus) existed right up till the 2nd century BCE (1 Macc 10:83-84; 11:4). We also hear
of Baal-zebub, the god of Ekron (2 Kgs 1:2-3, 6, 16), from whom Ahaziah king of Israel sought
an oracle. This name, “Baal of the fly” is a distortion of Baal-zebul, “Baal the Prince”
(compare zbl b‘l, “Prince Baal” at Ugarit). 1 Sam 31:10 attests a temple of Ashtaroth (Astarte),
consort of Baal, presumably at Beth-Shan, and the mention by Herodotus (Histories 1.105) of a
temple of Aphrodite at Ashkelon surely also refers to Astarte. An obscure Philistine
goddess ptg[?]yh, presumably Indo-European in origin, is mentioned in a 7th-century inscription
from Ekron, while another Ekron inscription refers to the goddess Asherah. A curious figurine of
a goddess, part goddess and part throne, was discovered at Ashdod (and thus nicknamed
Ashdoda), for which Mycenaean parallels have been adduced. Philistine temples have been
unearthed at Ashdod, Ekron, and Tell Qasile (the last within modern Tel Aviv), and various
Philistine cult objects are also attested. The Philistines also acquired a reputation for soothsaying
(Isaiah 2:6).
Material culture
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The Philistines are well known for their decorated pottery depicting geometrical designs and
birds. The earliest Philistine pottery is monochrome ware (dark brown on white slip), which
shows clear continuity with Mycenaean (Late Helladic) IIIC pottery. From this developed
Philistine bichrome ware (black and red on white slip). Another characteristic feature are
Philistine anthropoid coffins found at Deir el-Balah, Beth-Shan, and elsewhere. Excavations at
Ekron revealed over one hundred large oil presses, making it the largest known centre of olive oil
production in the ancient Near East. Cemeteries, including one for dogs, are attested at Ashkelon.
Language
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The Philistines must have arrived in Canaan speaking an Indo-European language. Early
Philistine layers at Ashdod and Ashkelon have revealed respectively two seals and several
inscriptions bearing signs of Cypro-Minoan character, and these could well represent the
Philistine language. But this script remains undeciphered. It has often been suggested that the
word seren, used in the Hebrew Bible exclusively of the Philistine rulers (e.g., Josh 13:3; 1 Sam
6:16, 18), is a Philistine word cognate with Greek turannos and Luwian tarwanis “king, ruler.”
Other possible Philistine words in the Hebrew Bible have also been suggested. Fairly early on the
Philistines appear to have appropriated the local Canaanite language. Evidence of this has been
found in the 10th/9th century at Philistine Tell es-Safi (Gath) and various Philistine inscriptions
in Canaanite script have been found at 7th-century Ekron. A considerable number of Philistine
personal names known to us are Semitic, though others reflect an Indo-European background. In
the 5th century BCE Neh 13:24 refers to “the language of Ashdod,” presumably Ashdod’s
Canaanite dialect.
Aftermath
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Finally, two subsequent developments are worth noting here. First, it is ironic that the Israelites’
great enemy, the Philistines, ended up giving their name to the land of Israel. Although their
name was originally confined to the coastal strip of Philistia (a meaning still attested in Assyrian
records from the period of their domination), from the time of Herodotus in the mid-5th century
BCE onwards we find the name in the form Palestine being used by the Greeks to refer to the
entire land of Israel. The name was also employed by many subsequent Roman authors, and from
135 CE the Jews were incorporated into the Roman province of Palestine, a name which has been
widely used for the area ever since.
Secondly, in much more recent times, the term “philistine” became a term for an uncultivated
person. This arose from the negative portrayal of the Philistines in the Bible. But in fact, as their
pottery shows, the Philistines were on a higher cultural level than the Israelites.
Further reading
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Bierling, Neal. Giving Goliath his Due: New Archaeological Light on the Philistines. Grand
Rapids: Baker, 1992.
Cline, Eric H. 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
2014.
Dothan, Trude. The Philistines and their Material Culture. New Haven: Yale University Press,
1982.
Dothan, Trude, and Moshe Dothan. People of the Sea: The Search for the Philistines. New York:
Macmillan Publishing Company, 1992.
Ehrlich, Carl S. The Philistines in Transition: A History from ca. 1000-730 BCE. Leiden: Brill,
1996.
Killebrew, Anne E., and Gunnar Lehmann, eds. The Philistines and Other “Sea Peoples” in Text
and Archaeology. Archaeology and Bibical Studies 15. Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature,
2013.
Landau, Assaf Yassur. The Philistines and Aegean Migration at the End of the Late Brone Age.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.
Philistines
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