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• The Phoenicians lived in a region at the eastern end of the Mediterranean Sea that was is now known as Palestine. • It became the home of the Hebrews and they referred it to it as Canaan. • Ancient Palestine’s location made it a cultural crossroads of the ancient world. • To the east, there was Assyria and Babylonia • To the west, there was Egypt. • The Hebrews settled Canaan, it was between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea • Let’s find out how the Hebrews migrated to Most of what we know about the Hebrews, we know from the first five books in the Hebrew Bible • The Torah • The Old Testament In the Torah, God chose Abraham to be the father of the Hebrew people. Origins of Hebrews in Canaan: • God’s words to Abraham expressed a promise of land. • Abraham was a shepherd living in the city of Ur. • The book of Genesis tells its readers that God commanded Abraham to move his people to Canaan. • Around 1800 B.C., Abraham, his family, and his herds made their way to Canaan. • Abraham and his family moved from Mesopotamia to Canaan to Egypt and back to Canaan • All the while, their God Yahweh watched over them. • Unlike other religions at that time, the Hebrews worshipped one God. – Monotheism • The Hebrews proclaimed the Yahweh was the one and only God. • In their eyes, Yahweh had power over all people. – To the Hebrews, God was not a physical being. • According to the Bible, Yahweh looked after the Hebrews because they obeyed and listened to the orders he gave Abraham. – No sacrifices – No gifts – No ritual ceremonies *The covenant: Mutual promise between God and Abraham • The Hebrews migrated to Egypt because a drought in Canaan threatened a massive famine. • At first, the Hebrews were given places of honor in the Egyptian Kingdom. • Later, however, they were forced into slavery. • The Hebrews fled Egypt between 1300-1200 B.C. • The event is known as the Exodus • It’s celebrated every year during the festival of Passover • The Torah says the man who led the escape was a man named Moses. • Moses was the adopted son of an Egyptian princess, but he did not forget his Hebrew roots. • When God commanded Moses to move the Hebrews out of Egypt, he followed his command. – A new covenant was born. • During their escape from Egypt, Moses and the Hebrews stopped on Sinai mountain. • Moses climbed the mountain to talk to God. • When he came down, he had two stone tablets – The Ten Commandments • The Ten Commandments became the basis for the civil and religious laws of Judaism • The Hebrew people believed that these new laws created a new covenant between God and the Hebrew people. – God promised to protect the Hebrew people – The Hebrews promised to follow the ten Commandments. The Torah reads that the Hebrews wandered the Sinai Desert for forty years • After the death of Moses, the Hebrew people returned to Canaan where Abraham lived. • The Hebrews evolved from a nomadic society to a settled civilization. • The Hebrews in Canaan were twelve sparsely separated tribes. • Occasionally the tribes would band together and fight against the Philistines • Another civilization in Canaan • Eventually there was one large tribe left Came to be known as The Jews – Their religion was transformed into Judaism • 1020 to 922 B.C., the Hebrews united under three kings. – Saul – David – Solomon Solomon David Saul *The new Kingdom was called Israel. • Saul was the first of the three Kings • Became popular after he drove the Philistines from the central hills of Palestine ……………………………………………………………………… • David was the son-in-law of Saul • Extremely popular because he united the Jewish tribes • Established Jerusalem as the capital city • About 962 B.C., David was succeeded by Solomon. • Solomon was the mightiest of the Hebrew Kings – Established a trading empire with the Phoenicians – Built a great temple in Jerusalem which housed the Ten Commandment tablets • The Temple was not large but inner walls were gold with bronze pillars were outside Displayed wealth • Solomon’s building project called for high taxes and forced labor. • The distress ultimately caused a split amongst the Jews. • By 922 B.C., there were two Jewish empires. – The North: Israel – The South: Judah The next two hundred years, the two kingdoms of Israel were kind of confusing. • Sometimes they fought each other. • Sometimes they joined forces to fight others. • In 738 B.C., both Kingdoms began paying tributes to more power Assyrians – Tributes are peace payments. • 725 B.C., the Assyrians began relentless sieges of the two Jewish Kingdoms. • By 722 B.C., Israel had fallen. • Judah resisted for another 150 years but eventually fell. • The destruction of Judah came by the hands of the Babylonians – Attack led by King Nebuchadnezzar – Solomon’s temple was destroyed. • After the success of the Babylonian attacks, many of the Jews were exiled to Babylon. • During their exile, the bible describes that the prophet Ezekiel urged his people to keep their religion alive in the foreign land. Ezekiel • In 539 B.C., the Persian King Cyrus the Great conquered Babylon. • Cyrus allowed 40,000 exiles to return to Jerusalem and they rebuilt the temple. • In 445 B.C., the Walls of Jerusalem were built. • Soon, however, other empires dominated the region. • First the Persians, then the Greeks, and then the Romans • These empires would all take control of Palestine.