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Iturea

Iturea (Ancient Greek: Ἰτουραία, Itouraía) is the Greek name of a Levantine region north of Galilee during the Late Hellenistic and early Roman periods. It extended from Mount Lebanon across the plain of Marsyas[dubious ] to the Anti-Lebanon Mountains in Syria, with its centre in Chalcis.[1]

Map of Roman Palestine in the first century; according to Conder (1889)

Itureans

The Itureans (Greek: Ἰτουραῖοι) were a semi-nomadic tribe who became sedentarized in the Hellenistic period.[2] The exact origin of the Itureans is disputed. Most scholars identified them as Arabs,[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10] while some believed that they were Aramaean people.[11][12]

They first rose to power in the aftermath of the decline of the Seleucids in the 2nd century BCE. Then, from their base around Mount Lebanon and the Beqaa Valley, they came to dominate vast stretches of Syrian territory,[13] and appear to have penetrated into northern parts of Israel as far as the Galilee.[14]

Etymology

Several etymologies have been proposed for the name Iturea and much uncertainty still remains.

Based on the Septuagint translation of 1Ch 5:19 several commentators including Gesenius, John Gill and William Muir equated the Itureans with Jetur one of the former Hagrite encampments, named after a son of Ishmael.[15] Later scholars who propose a late origin for the Biblical texts continued to equate the names but viewed the writers of the Bible as basing the Biblical name on that of the Itureans of later centuries.[16] More recent scholars have dismissed such direct relationships between the Biblical Jetur and the Itureans: The account of the Hagrites places Jetur east of Gilead and describes the end of that tribe which was conquered by the Israelites in the days of Saul, whereas Iturea has been confirmed to be north of Galilee and the Itureans first appear in the Hellenistic period with their location only being referred to as Iturea in the Roman period. Although Jetur is translated Itouraion (Ιτουραιων) in 1Ch 5:19, the rendering of the name is not consistent across the Septuagint with the occurrences in Ge 25:15 and 1Ch 1:31 being transliterated Ietour (Ιετουρ) and Iettour (Ιεττουρ) respectively. The translation Itouraion in 1Ch 5:19 (if not an error) would thus be a reinterpretation by the translator of the name of this ancient tribe as referring to a contemporary people. Moreover, in Josephus where both names are mentioned, Jetur (Ιετουρ-) is rendered differently in Greek to Iturea (Ιτουρ-). Similarly in the Vulgate the two localities have different Latin names (Iathur for Jetur and Itureae for Iturea) showing that writers of antiquity did not view the names as the same.[17] Eupolemus used the term Itureans to refer to people from the Biblical region of Aram-Zobah not Jetur when describing the wars of King David.

Smith's Bible Dictionary attempted to equate the modern Arabic region name Jedur (جدور) with both Jetur and Iturea however the Arabic j (ج) corresponds to Hebrew g (ג) and not y (י), and Arabic d (د) does not correspond to Hebrew (ט) or Greek t (τ) and the mainstream view is that Jedur is instead the Biblical Gedor (גדור).

David Urquhart linked the Itureans with Aturea a name for the region of Nineveh, a variant of Assyria, suggesting that the Itureans were originally Assyrians, also implying a connection with the Druze living in the region in his time. (The name "Druze" is however unrelated to "Iturean".) [18]

Ernest Axel Knauf related Iturea to the Safaitic name Yaẓur (יט׳ור, يظور) which is rendered Yaṭur (יטור) in Nabatean Aramaic. Before being established as the name of a people (Al-Yaẓur or Yaṭureans), this name is found as a personal name, in particular that of a Nabatean prince with a brother Zabud whose name may be connected with that of the Zabadaeans, another Nabatean tribe who together with the Itureans had been conquered by the Hasmoneans. Yaẓur in Safaitic inscriptions is seemingly a cognate of the Biblical name Jetur (Yeṭur, יטור) and is possibly derived from its original form. If this is the case then Biblical Jetur would indirectly be the origin of the name Iturea although denoting a different region and people centuries before.[19][20] Whether the names are indeed related hinges on their original meanings. The Gesenius' Hebrew-Chaldee Lexicon suggests that Jetur means "enclosure" related to the personal name Ṭur (טור) and the word ṭirah (טירה) denoting an encampment and explicitly used for the Ishmaelite encampments. This would contradict their being a connection with Yaẓur as in Arabic which like Safaitic preserves the distinction between the (ظ) and (ط) sounds, this root is found with and not . Thus if the Itureans derived their name from Jetur, the people known as the Yaẓur in Safaitic inscriptions would have been a different people, possibly only a small family group, while if the Itureans derived their name from Yaẓur there would be no connection with Jetur.

Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary however suggests that Jetur means "order; succession; mountainous". A connection with "mountain" (more precisely "rock fortress") may refer to the Hebrew word ṣur (צור), a root which survives in Arabic ẓar (ظر) meaning "flint", the sound (ظ) having become (צ) in Hebrew. The spelling Yeṭur (יטור) would thus be the result of an Aramaic spelling convention in which the is represented by ṭet (ט) rather than its true Hebrew reflex ṣadi (צ). If this meaning is correct, then a linguistic connection between the names Jetur and Yaẓur remains a possibility, however no occurrence of an Aramaic spelling of this nature in the Hebrew Bible is known even for names in the Aramaic and Arabic realms and the expected Hebrew spelling would be Yaṣur (יצור). The root ṭur (טור) having a basic meaning of row, line or fence (hence "order; succession"), also refers to a mountain range thus also providing a connection with "mountain".

A further phonetic complication exists in equating the name Iturea with either Jetur or Yaẓur. Yaẓur as a personal name is consistently found as Iatour- (Ιατουρ-) in Greek inscriptions. In Iatour- the initial Greek iota (Ι) is consonantal representing the initial y sound of Yaẓur. Similarly, in the transliterations Ietour- (Ιετουρ) and Iettour ((Ιεττουρ)) for Jetur in the Septuagint, the iota represents an original y - the Hebrew letter yod (י). However, in Itour- the iota is a vowel suggesting that it represents an i vowel in the original Semitic name rather than the consonant y. An initial iota may also be used for the syllable yi, however such a reading of Itour- (Ιτουρ-) does not produce a meaningful form and no tradition of pronouncing it as such exists. As a vowel is always preceded by a consonant in Semitic words, the initial consonant would have been one of the four guttural consonants dropped in Greek transliteration (א,ה,ח,ע). This contradicts derivations from either Jetur or Yaẓur and is the basis of several alternative etymologies proposed by John Lightfoot.

Lightfoot considered a possible derivation from the root for "ten" (I.e. `-s-r, עשר) based on identification of Iturea with Decapolis ("ten cities"). However he does not provide a grammatical form that would be vocalized as Itour- and ultimately dismisses this possibility as it involves an unattested sound change of s (ש) into t (ט). Decapolis is also a distinct region to Iturea.

Lightfoot also considered derivations from proposed terms whose meanings he gives as "wealth" (hittur, i.e. היתור) and "diggings" (chitture, i.e. חתורי) He favored the derivation from chitture noting the descriptions of the landscape. Derivations from hittur or chitture are problematic however. The Semitic tav (ת) is normally transliterated by theta (θ) in Greek, not tau (τ). Additionally, although the consonants he (ה) and chet (ח) are dropped in Greek transliteration, they survive as a rough breathing provided to the initial vowel and are transliterated by "h" in Latin. However no tradition of a rough breathing in the pronunciation of Itour- exists nor is Iturea ever given an initial h in Latin. A further difficulty is that while the roots of these two words are known, the forms which Lightfoot has used are conjectural.

Lightfoot also proposed a derivation from `iṭur (עטור) meaning "crowning" (or "decoration") Unlike his other proposals, this word is well attested and remains a plausible derivation as it would be transliterated as Itour- (Ιτουρ) in Greek. Regarding this possibility, Lightfoot notes familiarly of the notion of a country crowned with plenty in Talmudic writings.[21] However the name was first an ethnonym before becoming a toponym, and in the Josippon the Iturean nation is referred to as 'iṭuraios (איטוריאוס) in Hebrew rendered with an aleph (א) not an ayin (ע) showing that Jewish tradition, at least as preserved by the writer of the Josippon, did not view the name as being related to `iṭur (עטור) meaning "crowning".

In the Syriac Peshittas which are the texts closest in time to the period in which the tetrarchy of Iturea existed that provide a Semitic form of the name, it is called 'iṭuriya' (ܐܝܛܘܪܝܐ) rendered with an initial alap and yodh (ܐܝ). This may arise from either an initial 'i syllable or initial yi syllable in earlier Hebrew or Aramaic. As the latter does not produce a meaningful form it suggests that the original syllable is 'i indicating an initial aleph (א) in the original. This accords with the usage of aleph in the Josippon and suggests that the original Semitic form of the name was 'iṭur (איטור or אטור) or 'iẓur (איט׳ור or אט׳ור). The latter would share a common root with Hebrew ṣur (צור) however the use of a (ט) not an (צ) in the Josippon indicates that the word was not understood as such by the author and indeed no grammatical form that would be vocalized as 'iẓur is known for this root. The former possibility 'iṭur (איטור or אטור) is the noun form of the known word 'iṭer (אטר) meaning "bound" or "shut up" in Hebrew [22] ultimately sharing a common etymology with the word ṭirah (טירה) used for an encampment. A Nabatean personal name written 'i-ṭ-r-w (אטרו) based on one or the other of these roots is attested.[23] In Aramaic however the base word ṭur (טור) is used particularly for a line of mountains rather than a boundary of an encampment and the understanding of the name Itureans in Syriac is "mountain dwellers" according with the location of their settlement being the Mount Lebanon region.[24]

History

In 105 BCE, Aristobulus I campaigned against Iturea, and added a great part of it to Judea, annexing the Galilee to the Hasmonean kingdom. Josephus cites a passage from Timagenes excerpted by Strabo which recounts that Aristobulus was:

'very serviceable to the Jews, for he added a country to them, and obtained a part of the nation of the Itureans for them, and bound to them by the bond of the circumcision of their genitals.[25][26]

Whether the Hasmoneans circumcised the Itureans and other populations against their will is uncertain: Strabo asserts that they simply created a confederation with such tribes based on the common bond of circumcision, which may be more plausible, though their policy appears to have been one of aggressive Judaizing.[27]

 
Ruins of an Iturean village in the Golan Heights

The Iturean kingdom appears to have had its centre in the kingdom of Ptolemy, son of Mennaeus (Mennæus), whose residence was at Chalcis(?) and who reigned 85-40 BCE. Ptolemy was succeeded by his son Lysanias, called by Dio Cassius (xlix. 32) "king of the Itureans." About 23 BCE, Iturea with the adjacent provinces fell into the hands of a chief named Zenodorus (Josephus, l.c. xv. 10, § 1; idem, B. J. i. 20, § 4). Three years later, at the death of Zenodorus, Augustus gave Iturea to Herod the Great, who in turn bequeathed it to his son Philip (Josephus, Ant. xv. 10, § 3).

The area and the Itureans are mentioned only once in the New Testament, in the Luke iii. 1, but are frequently described by pagan writers such as Strabo, Pliny the Elder, and Cicero. The Jewish writer Josephus also described them. They were known to the Romans as a predatory people,[28] and were appreciated by them for their great skill in archery.[29] They played a notable role in the defense of Jerusalem. A branch of the Itureans were allegedly conquered by the Hasmonean king Alexander Jannaeus (r. 103 to 76 BCE) and, according to Josephus, forcibly converted to Judaism.[30][31]

Many Christian theologians, among them Eusebius,[32] taking into consideration the above-cited passage of Luke, place Iturea near Trachonitis. According to Josephus,[33] the Iturean kingdom lay north of Galilee. That Itureans dwelt in the region of Mount Lebanon is confirmed by an inscription of about the year 6 CE (Ephemeris Epigraphica, 1881, pp. 537–542), in which Quintus Aemilius Secundus relates that he was sent by Quirinius against the Itureans in Mount Lebanon. In 38 Caligula gave Iturea to a certain Soemus, who is called by Dio Cassius (lix. 12) and by Tacitus (Annals, xii. 23) "king of the Itureans." After the death of Soemus (49) his kingdom was incorporated into the province of Syria (Tacitus, l.c.). After this incorporation the Itureans furnished soldiers for the Roman army; and the designations Ala I Augusta Ituraeorum and Cohors I Augusta Ituraeorum are met with in the inscriptions (Ephemeris Epigraphica, 1884, p. 194).

References

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Iturea". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
  • E. A. Myers, The Ituraeans and the Roman Near East (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2010).
  • D. Herman, Catalogue of the Iturean coins. Israel Numismatic Review 1:51-72.
  • Said, Salah, "Two New Greek Inscriptions with the name ϒTWR from Umm al-Jimāl," Palestine Exploration Quarterly, 138,2 (2006), 125-132.
  • WRIGHT, N.L. 2013: "Ituraean coinage in context." Numismatic Chronicle 173: 55-71. (available online here)

Notes

  1. ^ Berndt Schaller, 'Ituraea' in Der Kleine Pauly: Lexicon der Antike, Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag, 5 vols. Bd.2. 1979, p.1492.
  2. ^ Meyers, Eric M.; Research, American Schools of Oriental; Press, Oxford University (1997). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-511216-0.
  3. ^ David F. Graf (2003). Arabs in Syria: Demography and Epigraphy. Topoi. Orient-Occident. Supplément.
  4. ^ Irfan Shahîd (1984). Rome and the Arabs: A Prolegomenon to the Study of Byzantium and the Arabs (Hardcover ed.). Dumbarton Oaks. p. 5. ISBN 978-0884021155.
  5. ^ Mark A. Chancey (2002). The Myth of a Gentile Galilee (Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series) (Hardcover ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 44. ISBN 0-521-81487-1.
  6. ^ Zuleika Rodgers; Margaret Daly-Denton; Anne Fitzpatrick-McKinley (2009). A Wandering Galilean: Essays in Honour of Seán Freyne (Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism) (Hardcover ed.). Brill. p. 207. ISBN 978-90-04-17355-2.
  7. ^ Doron Mendels (1987). The Land of Israel As a Political Concept in Hasmonean Literature: Recourse to History in a Second Century B.C. Claims to the Holy Land (Texte und Studien zum antiken Judentum) (Hardcover ed.). J.C.B. Mohr. p. 66. ISBN 3-16-145147-3.
  8. ^ Steve Mason (2003). Flavius Josephus: Life of Josephus (Paperback ed.). Brill Academic Publishers. p. 54. ISBN 0-391-04205-X.
  9. ^ Finney (2017). The Eerdmans Encyclopedia of Early Christian Art and Archaeology. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 9780802890160.
  10. ^ Collins, John Joseph; Sterling, Gregory E. (2001-01-01). Hellenism in the Land of Israel. University of Notre Dame. ISBN 9780268030513.
  11. ^ Avraham Negev; Shimon Gibson (2005). Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land (Paperback ed.). Continuum. p. 249. ISBN 0-8264-8571-5.
  12. ^ John Wilson (2004). Caesarea Philippi: Banias, The Lost City of Pan (Hardcover ed.). I. B. Tauris. p. 7. ISBN 1-85043-440-9.
  13. ^ Steve Mason, Life of Josephus,Brill, 2007 p.54, n.306.
  14. ^ Berndt Schaller, Ituraea, p.1492.
  15. ^ William Muir, Esq., The Life of Mohamet, 4 volumes, Smith, Elder & Co., London, 1861
  16. ^ Knauf, Ernst Axel. ‘The Ituraeans: Another Bedouin State’. In Baalbek: Image and Monument 1898–1998. Edited by Hélène Sader, Thomas Scheffler and Angelika Neuwirth. Beiruter Texte und Studien 69. Beirut: Franz Steiner, pp. 269–77.
  17. ^ Julien Aliquot, Les Ituréens et la présence arabe au Liban du IIe siècle a.C. au IVe siècle p.C., Mélanges de l’Université Saint-Joseph 56, 1999-2003, p. 161-290.
  18. ^ David Urquart, The Lebanon (Mount Souria), T. C. Newby, 1860, p. 16-17.
  19. ^ E. A. Myers, The Ituraeans and the Roman Near East (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2010)
  20. ^ Salah Said & M. Al-Hamad, Three short Nabataean inscriptions from Umm al-Jimāl, Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies, 34 (2004): 313–318
  21. ^ 'John Lightfoot, 'A Commentary on the New Testament from the Talmud and Hebraica, Cambridge and London, 1658-1674, Chorographical Notes, Chapter 1: Of the places mentioned in Luke 3, Iturea
  22. ^ Strong's Hebrew Lexicon, 33
  23. ^ Negev, Avraham. "Personal Names in the Nabatean Realm." Qedem 32 (1991): III-228.
  24. ^ Dau, Butros. "History of the Maronites: Religious, Cultural, and Political." Lebanon, 1984, p. 51
  25. ^ Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews, Book 13,318-19.
  26. ^ Shayne J.D.Cohen, 'Respect for Judaism by Gentiles According to Josephus,' in Shayne J.D. Cohen (ed.) The Significance of Yavneh and Other Essays in Jewish Hellenism, Mohr Siebeck, 2012 p.200.
  27. ^ Shayne J.D. Cohen, 'Was Judaism in Antiquity a Missionary Religion,' in Cohen, ibid. pp.299-308, p.301.
  28. ^ Cicero, Philippics, ii. 112.
  29. ^ Cæsar, Bellum Africanum, 20.
  30. ^ Flavius Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews, in Flavii Iosephi opera, ed. B. Niese, Weidmann, Berlin, 1892, book 13, 9:1
  31. ^ Seán Freyne, 'Galilean Studies: Old Issues and New Questions,' in Jürgen Zangenberg, Harold W. Attridge, Dale B. Martin, (eds.)Religion, Ethnicity, and Identity in Ancient Galilee: A Region in Transition, Mohr Siebeck, 2007 pp.13-32, p.25.
  32. ^ Onomasticon, ed. Lagarde, pp. 268, 298.
  33. ^ Ant. xiii. 11, § 3.

iturea, ancient, greek, Ἰτουραία, itouraía, greek, name, levantine, region, north, galilee, during, late, hellenistic, early, roman, periods, extended, from, mount, lebanon, across, plain, marsyas, dubious, discuss, anti, lebanon, mountains, syria, with, centr. Iturea Ancient Greek Ἰtoyraia Itouraia is the Greek name of a Levantine region north of Galilee during the Late Hellenistic and early Roman periods It extended from Mount Lebanon across the plain of Marsyas dubious discuss to the Anti Lebanon Mountains in Syria with its centre in Chalcis 1 Map of Roman Palestine in the first century according to Conder 1889 Contents 1 Itureans 2 Etymology 3 History 4 References 5 NotesItureans EditThe Itureans Greek Ἰtoyraῖoi were a semi nomadic tribe who became sedentarized in the Hellenistic period 2 The exact origin of the Itureans is disputed Most scholars identified them as Arabs 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 while some believed that they were Aramaean people 11 12 They first rose to power in the aftermath of the decline of the Seleucids in the 2nd century BCE Then from their base around Mount Lebanon and the Beqaa Valley they came to dominate vast stretches of Syrian territory 13 and appear to have penetrated into northern parts of Israel as far as the Galilee 14 Etymology EditSeveral etymologies have been proposed for the name Iturea and much uncertainty still remains Based on the Septuagint translation of 1Ch 5 19 several commentators including Gesenius John Gill and William Muir equated the Itureans with Jetur one of the former Hagrite encampments named after a son of Ishmael 15 Later scholars who propose a late origin for the Biblical texts continued to equate the names but viewed the writers of the Bible as basing the Biblical name on that of the Itureans of later centuries 16 More recent scholars have dismissed such direct relationships between the Biblical Jetur and the Itureans The account of the Hagrites places Jetur east of Gilead and describes the end of that tribe which was conquered by the Israelites in the days of Saul whereas Iturea has been confirmed to be north of Galilee and the Itureans first appear in the Hellenistic period with their location only being referred to as Iturea in the Roman period Although Jetur is translated Itouraion Itoyraiwn in 1Ch 5 19 the rendering of the name is not consistent across the Septuagint with the occurrences in Ge 25 15 and 1Ch 1 31 being transliterated Ietour Ietoyr and Iettour Iettoyr respectively The translation Itouraion in 1Ch 5 19 if not an error would thus be a reinterpretation by the translator of the name of this ancient tribe as referring to a contemporary people Moreover in Josephus where both names are mentioned Jetur Ietoyr is rendered differently in Greek to Iturea Itoyr Similarly in the Vulgate the two localities have different Latin names Iathur for Jetur and Itureae for Iturea showing that writers of antiquity did not view the names as the same 17 Eupolemus used the term Itureans to refer to people from the Biblical region of Aram Zobah not Jetur when describing the wars of King David Smith s Bible Dictionary attempted to equate the modern Arabic region name Jedur جدور with both Jetur and Iturea however the Arabic j ج corresponds to Hebrew g ג and not y י and Arabic d د does not correspond to Hebrew ṭ ט or Greek t t and the mainstream view is that Jedur is instead the Biblical Gedor גדור David Urquhart linked the Itureans with Aturea a name for the region of Nineveh a variant of Assyria suggesting that the Itureans were originally Assyrians also implying a connection with the Druze living in the region in his time The name Druze is however unrelated to Iturean 18 Ernest Axel Knauf related Iturea to the Safaitic name Yaẓur יט ור يظور which is rendered Yaṭur יטור in Nabatean Aramaic Before being established as the name of a people Al Yaẓur or Yaṭureans this name is found as a personal name in particular that of a Nabatean prince with a brother Zabud whose name may be connected with that of the Zabadaeans another Nabatean tribe who together with the Itureans had been conquered by the Hasmoneans Yaẓur in Safaitic inscriptions is seemingly a cognate of the Biblical name Jetur Yeṭur יטור and is possibly derived from its original form If this is the case then Biblical Jetur would indirectly be the origin of the name Iturea although denoting a different region and people centuries before 19 20 Whether the names are indeed related hinges on their original meanings The Gesenius Hebrew Chaldee Lexicon suggests that Jetur means enclosure related to the personal name Ṭur טור and the word ṭirah טירה denoting an encampment and explicitly used for the Ishmaelite encampments This would contradict their being a connection with Yaẓur as in Arabic which like Safaitic preserves the distinction between the ẓ ظ and ṭ ط sounds this root is found with ṭ and not ẓ Thus if the Itureans derived their name from Jetur the people known as the Yaẓur in Safaitic inscriptions would have been a different people possibly only a small family group while if the Itureans derived their name from Yaẓur there would be no connection with Jetur Hitchcock s Bible Names Dictionary however suggests that Jetur means order succession mountainous A connection with mountain more precisely rock fortress may refer to the Hebrew word ṣur צור a root which survives in Arabic ẓar ظر meaning flint the sound ẓ ظ having become ṣ צ in Hebrew The spelling Yeṭur יטור would thus be the result of an Aramaic spelling convention in which the ẓ is represented by ṭet ט rather than its true Hebrew reflex ṣadi צ If this meaning is correct then a linguistic connection between the names Jetur and Yaẓur remains a possibility however no occurrence of an Aramaic spelling of this nature in the Hebrew Bible is known even for names in the Aramaic and Arabic realms and the expected Hebrew spelling would be Yaṣur יצור The root ṭur טור having a basic meaning of row line or fence hence order succession also refers to a mountain range thus also providing a connection with mountain A further phonetic complication exists in equating the name Iturea with either Jetur or Yaẓur Yaẓur as a personal name is consistently found as Iatour Iatoyr in Greek inscriptions In Iatour the initial Greek iota I is consonantal representing the initial y sound of Yaẓur Similarly in the transliterations Ietour Ietoyr and Iettour Iettoyr for Jetur in the Septuagint the iota represents an original y the Hebrew letter yod י However in Itour the iota is a vowel suggesting that it represents an i vowel in the original Semitic name rather than the consonant y An initial iota may also be used for the syllable yi however such a reading of Itour Itoyr does not produce a meaningful form and no tradition of pronouncing it as such exists As a vowel is always preceded by a consonant in Semitic words the initial consonant would have been one of the four guttural consonants dropped in Greek transliteration א ה ח ע This contradicts derivations from either Jetur or Yaẓur and is the basis of several alternative etymologies proposed by John Lightfoot Lightfoot considered a possible derivation from the root for ten I e s r עשר based on identification of Iturea with Decapolis ten cities However he does not provide a grammatical form that would be vocalized as Itour and ultimately dismisses this possibility as it involves an unattested sound change of s ש into t ט Decapolis is also a distinct region to Iturea Lightfoot also considered derivations from proposed terms whose meanings he gives as wealth hittur i e היתור and diggings chitture i e חתורי He favored the derivation from chitture noting the descriptions of the landscape Derivations from hittur or chitture are problematic however The Semitic tav ת is normally transliterated by theta 8 in Greek not tau t Additionally although the consonants he ה and chet ח are dropped in Greek transliteration they survive as a rough breathing provided to the initial vowel and are transliterated by h in Latin However no tradition of a rough breathing in the pronunciation of Itour exists nor is Iturea ever given an initial h in Latin A further difficulty is that while the roots of these two words are known the forms which Lightfoot has used are conjectural Lightfoot also proposed a derivation from iṭur עטור meaning crowning or decoration Unlike his other proposals this word is well attested and remains a plausible derivation as it would be transliterated as Itour Itoyr in Greek Regarding this possibility Lightfoot notes familiarly of the notion of a country crowned with plenty in Talmudic writings 21 However the name was first an ethnonym before becoming a toponym and in the Josippon the Iturean nation is referred to as iṭuraios איטוריאוס in Hebrew rendered with an aleph א not an ayin ע showing that Jewish tradition at least as preserved by the writer of the Josippon did not view the name as being related to iṭur עטור meaning crowning In the Syriac Peshittas which are the texts closest in time to the period in which the tetrarchy of Iturea existed that provide a Semitic form of the name it is called iṭuriya ܐܝܛܘܪܝܐ rendered with an initial alap and yodh ܐܝ This may arise from either an initial i syllable or initial yi syllable in earlier Hebrew or Aramaic As the latter does not produce a meaningful form it suggests that the original syllable is i indicating an initial aleph א in the original This accords with the usage of aleph in the Josippon and suggests that the original Semitic form of the name was iṭur איטור or אטור or iẓur איט ור or אט ור The latter would share a common root with Hebrew ṣur צור however the use of a ṭ ט not an ṣ צ in the Josippon indicates that the word was not understood as such by the author and indeed no grammatical form that would be vocalized as iẓur is known for this root The former possibility iṭur איטור or אטור is the noun form of the known word iṭer אטר meaning bound or shut up in Hebrew 22 ultimately sharing a common etymology with the word ṭirah טירה used for an encampment A Nabatean personal name written i ṭ r w אטרו based on one or the other of these roots is attested 23 In Aramaic however the base word ṭur טור is used particularly for a line of mountains rather than a boundary of an encampment and the understanding of the name Itureans in Syriac is mountain dwellers according with the location of their settlement being the Mount Lebanon region 24 History EditFurther information Hasmonean Kingdom Herodian Kingdom Iturea and Trachonitis tetrarchy Roman Syria and 1st century in Lebanon In 105 BCE Aristobulus I campaigned against Iturea and added a great part of it to Judea annexing the Galilee to the Hasmonean kingdom Josephus cites a passage from Timagenes excerpted by Strabo which recounts that Aristobulus was very serviceable to the Jews for he added a country to them and obtained a part of the nation of the Itureans for them and bound to them by the bond of the circumcision of their genitals 25 26 Whether the Hasmoneans circumcised the Itureans and other populations against their will is uncertain Strabo asserts that they simply created a confederation with such tribes based on the common bond of circumcision which may be more plausible though their policy appears to have been one of aggressive Judaizing 27 Ruins of an Iturean village in the Golan Heights The Iturean kingdom appears to have had its centre in the kingdom of Ptolemy son of Mennaeus Mennaeus whose residence was at Chalcis and who reigned 85 40 BCE Ptolemy was succeeded by his son Lysanias called by Dio Cassius xlix 32 king of the Itureans About 23 BCE Iturea with the adjacent provinces fell into the hands of a chief named Zenodorus Josephus l c xv 10 1 idem B J i 20 4 Three years later at the death of Zenodorus Augustus gave Iturea to Herod the Great who in turn bequeathed it to his son Philip Josephus Ant xv 10 3 The area and the Itureans are mentioned only once in the New Testament in the Luke iii 1 but are frequently described by pagan writers such as Strabo Pliny the Elder and Cicero The Jewish writer Josephus also described them They were known to the Romans as a predatory people 28 and were appreciated by them for their great skill in archery 29 They played a notable role in the defense of Jerusalem A branch of the Itureans were allegedly conquered by the Hasmonean king Alexander Jannaeus r 103 to 76 BCE and according to Josephus forcibly converted to Judaism 30 31 Many Christian theologians among them Eusebius 32 taking into consideration the above cited passage of Luke place Iturea near Trachonitis According to Josephus 33 the Iturean kingdom lay north of Galilee That Itureans dwelt in the region of Mount Lebanon is confirmed by an inscription of about the year 6 CE Ephemeris Epigraphica 1881 pp 537 542 in which Quintus Aemilius Secundus relates that he was sent by Quirinius against the Itureans in Mount Lebanon In 38 Caligula gave Iturea to a certain Soemus who is called by Dio Cassius lix 12 and by Tacitus Annals xii 23 king of the Itureans After the death of Soemus 49 his kingdom was incorporated into the province of Syria Tacitus l c After this incorporation the Itureans furnished soldiers for the Roman army and the designations Ala I Augusta Ituraeorum and Cohors I Augusta Ituraeorum are met with in the inscriptions Ephemeris Epigraphica 1884 p 194 References Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore et al eds 1901 1906 Iturea The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls E A Myers The Ituraeans and the Roman Near East Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2010 D Herman Catalogue of the Iturean coins Israel Numismatic Review 1 51 72 Said Salah Two New Greek Inscriptions with the name ϒTWR from Umm al Jimal Palestine Exploration Quarterly 138 2 2006 125 132 WRIGHT N L 2013 Ituraean coinage in context Numismatic Chronicle 173 55 71 available online here Notes Edit Berndt Schaller Ituraea in Der Kleine Pauly Lexicon der Antike Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag 5 vols Bd 2 1979 p 1492 Meyers Eric M Research American Schools of Oriental Press Oxford University 1997 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 511216 0 David F Graf 2003 Arabs in Syria Demography and Epigraphy Topoi Orient Occident Supplement Irfan Shahid 1984 Rome and the Arabs A Prolegomenon to the Study of Byzantium and the Arabs Hardcover ed Dumbarton Oaks p 5 ISBN 978 0884021155 Mark A Chancey 2002 The Myth of a Gentile Galilee Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series Hardcover ed Cambridge University Press p 44 ISBN 0 521 81487 1 Zuleika Rodgers Margaret Daly Denton Anne Fitzpatrick McKinley 2009 A Wandering Galilean Essays in Honour of Sean Freyne Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism Hardcover ed Brill p 207 ISBN 978 90 04 17355 2 Doron Mendels 1987 The Land of Israel As a Political Concept in Hasmonean Literature Recourse to History in a Second Century B C Claims to the Holy Land Texte und Studien zum antiken Judentum Hardcover ed J C B Mohr p 66 ISBN 3 16 145147 3 Steve Mason 2003 Flavius Josephus Life of Josephus Paperback ed Brill Academic Publishers p 54 ISBN 0 391 04205 X Finney 2017 The Eerdmans Encyclopedia of Early Christian Art and Archaeology Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 9780802890160 Collins John Joseph Sterling Gregory E 2001 01 01 Hellenism in the Land of Israel University of Notre Dame ISBN 9780268030513 Avraham Negev Shimon Gibson 2005 Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land Paperback ed Continuum p 249 ISBN 0 8264 8571 5 John Wilson 2004 Caesarea Philippi Banias The Lost City of Pan Hardcover ed I B Tauris p 7 ISBN 1 85043 440 9 Steve Mason Life of Josephus Brill 2007 p 54 n 306 Berndt Schaller Ituraea p 1492 William Muir Esq The Life of Mohamet 4 volumes Smith Elder amp Co London 1861 Knauf Ernst Axel The Ituraeans Another Bedouin State In Baalbek Image and Monument 1898 1998 Edited by Helene Sader Thomas Scheffler and Angelika Neuwirth Beiruter Texte und Studien 69 Beirut Franz Steiner pp 269 77 Julien Aliquot Les Itureens et la presence arabe au Liban du IIe siecle a C au IVe siecle p C Melanges de l Universite Saint Joseph 56 1999 2003 p 161 290 David Urquart The Lebanon Mount Souria T C Newby 1860 p 16 17 E A Myers The Ituraeans and the Roman Near East Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2010 Salah Said amp M Al Hamad Three short Nabataean inscriptions from Umm al Jimal Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 34 2004 313 318 John Lightfoot A Commentary on the New Testament from the Talmud and Hebraica Cambridge and London 1658 1674 Chorographical Notes Chapter 1 Of the places mentioned in Luke 3 Iturea Strong s Hebrew Lexicon 33 Negev Avraham Personal Names in the Nabatean Realm Qedem 32 1991 III 228 Dau Butros History of the Maronites Religious Cultural and Political Lebanon 1984 p 51 Josephus Antiquities of the Jews Book 13 318 19 Shayne J D Cohen Respect for Judaism by Gentiles According to Josephus in Shayne J D Cohen ed The Significance of Yavneh and Other Essays in Jewish Hellenism Mohr Siebeck 2012 p 200 Shayne J D Cohen Was Judaism in Antiquity a Missionary Religion in Cohen ibid pp 299 308 p 301 Cicero Philippics ii 112 Caesar Bellum Africanum 20 Flavius Josephus Antiquities of the Jews in Flavii Iosephi opera ed B Niese Weidmann Berlin 1892 book 13 9 1 Sean Freyne Galilean Studies Old Issues and New Questions in Jurgen Zangenberg Harold W Attridge Dale B Martin eds Religion Ethnicity and Identity in Ancient Galilee A Region in Transition Mohr Siebeck 2007 pp 13 32 p 25 Onomasticon ed Lagarde pp 268 298 Ant xiii 11 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iturea amp oldid 1127228408, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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