Midian Explained

Midian
Other Name:Arabic: مَدْيَن|Madyan
Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Μαδιάμ|Madiam
Hebrew: מִדְיָן|Mīḏyān

Midian (; Hebrew: מִדְיָן Mīḏyān; Arabic: مَدْيَن|Madyan; Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Μαδιάμ, Madiam; Taymanitic: MDYN) is a geographical region in West Asia mentioned in the Tanakh and Quran. William G. Dever states that biblical Midian was in the "northwest Arabian Peninsula, on the east shore of the Gulf of Aqaba on the Red Sea", an area which contained at least 14 inhabited sites during the Late Bronze and early Iron Ages.[1]

According to the Book of Genesis, the Midianites were the descendants of Midian, a son of Abraham and his wife Keturah: "Abraham took a wife, and her name was Keturah. And she bare him Zimran, and Jokshan, and Medan, and Midian, and Ishbak, and Shuah" (Genesis 25:1–2, King James Version).[2]

Traditionally, knowledge about Midian and the Midianites' existence was based solely upon Biblical and classical sources,[3] but in 2010 a reference to Midian was identified in a Taymanitic inscription dated to before the 9th century BC.[4]

Land or tribal league?

Some scholars have suggested that the name "Midian" does not refer to geographic places or to a specific tribe,[5] [6] but to a confederation or "league" of tribes brought together as a collective for worship purposes. Paul Haupt first made this suggestion in 1909,[7] describing Midian as a "cultic collective" (German: Kultgenossenschaft) or an amphictyony, meaning "an association (German: Bund) of different tribes in the vicinity of a sanctuary". Elath, on the northern tip of the Gulf of Aqaba was suggested as the location of the first shrine, with a second sanctuary located at Kadesh.

Later writers have questioned the identified sanctuary locations but supported the thesis of a Midianite league. George Mendenhall suggests that the Midianites were a non-Semitic confederate group,[8] and William Dumbrell maintains the same:

Metallurgy

The area of Timna valley contains large deposits of copper that had been mined from the prehistoric times onward. Copper was mined here by the Egyptians during the reign of Pharaoh Seti I at the end of the 14th century BCE.[9]

Religion

See also: Kenite hypothesis. It is uncertain which deities the Midianites worshipped. Through their apparent religio-political connection with the Moabites[10] they are thought to have worshipped a multitude, including Baal-peor and Ashteroth. According to Karel van der Toorn, "By the 14th century BC, groups of Edomites and Midianites worshipped Yahweh as their God;" this conclusion is based on identification between Midianites and the Shasu.[11]

The Midianite connections to metallurgy at Timna have been noted by many scholars. Large amounts of Midianite ceramic ware has been discovered at these mining sites.[12]

An Egyptian temple of Hathor at Timna (Site 200) was first discovered during the Beno Rothenberg's excavations.[13]

"Rothenberg’s excavation of Site 200 revealed a number of Egyptian hieroglyphic inscriptions including those of: Seti I, Ramesses II, Merneptah, Seti II, and Queen Twosret of the Nineteenth Dynasty, as well as Ramesses III, Ramesses IV, and Ramesses V of the Twentieth Dynasty (pp. 163–166)."[14]

The site also continued to be used during the Midianite occupation in the area, which is usually dated to terminal Late Bronze Age-Early Iron Age.

The Midianites transformed the Hathor mining temple into a desert tent-shrine.[15] In addition to the discovery of post-holes, large quantities of red and yellow decayed cloth with beads woven into it, along with numerous copper rings/wire used to suspend the curtains, were found all along two walls of the shrine.

Beno Rothenberg,[16] the excavator of the site, suggested that the Midianites were making offerings to Hathor, especially since a large number of Midianite votive vessels (25%) were discovered in the shrine. However, whether Hathor or some other deity was the object of devotion during this period is difficult to ascertain.

A small bronze snake with gilded head was also discovered in the naos of the Timna mining shrine, along with a hoard of metal objects that included a small bronze figurine of a bearded male god, which according to Rothenberg was Midianite in origin. Michael Homan observes that the Midianite tent-shrine at Timna is one of the closest parallels to the biblical Tabernacle.[17]

In religious scripture

In the Bible

Midian was the son of Abraham.[18] Abraham's great-grandson Joseph, after being thrown into a pit by his brothers, was sold to either Midianites or Ishmaelites.[19]

Moses spent 40 years in voluntary exile in Midian after killing an Egyptian.[20] There, he married Zipporah, the daughter of Midianite priest Jethro[21] (also known as Reuel). Jethro advised Moses on establishing a system of delegated legal decision-making.[22] Moses asked Hobab, the son of Reuel, to accompany the Israelites travelling towards the Promised Land because of his local knowledge, but Hobab preferred to return to his homeland.[23] A number of scholars have proposed that the biblical description of devouring fire on Mount Sinai refers to an erupting volcano in the land of biblical Midian identified as Hala-'l Badr in northwestern Saudi Arabia.[24]

During the Baal-Peor episode, when Moabite women seduced Israelite men, Zimri, the son of a Simeonite chief, got involved with a Midianite woman called Cozbi. The couple were speared by Phinehas.[25] War against Midian followed. Numbers 31 reports that all but the virgin females were slain and their cities burned to the ground.[26] Some commentators, for example the Pulpit Commentary and Gill's Exposition of the Bible, note that God's command focused on attacking the Midianites and not the Moabites,[27] and similarly Moses in Deuteronomy directed that the Israelites should not harass the Moabites.[28] A modern-day movement, the Phineas Priesthood, has interpreted this story as a prohibition against miscegenation, despite the Midianites being closely related to the Israelites as descendants of Abraham, and Moses being married to a Midianite.

During the time of the Judges, Israel was oppressed by Midian for seven years[29] until Gideon defeated Midian's armies.[30] Isaiah speaks of camels from Midian and Ephah coming to "cover your land", along with the gold and frankincense from Sheba.[31] This passage, taken by the Gospel of Matthew as a foreshadowing of the Magi's gifts to the infant Jesus, has been incorporated into the Christmas liturgy.

In the Quran

The people of Midian are mentioned extensively in the Quran. The word 'Madyan' appears 10 times in it. The people are also called Arabic: ʾaṣḥabu l-ʾaykah (Arabic: أَصْحَابُ ٱلْأَيْكَة|lit=Companions of the Wood). The lands of Midian are mentioned in sura Al-Qasas (The Stories), verses 20–28, of the Quran as the place where Moses escaped upon learning of the chiefs conspiring to kill him.[32]

Surah 9 (Al-Tawbah), verse 70 says "Has not the story reached them of those before them? – The people of Nūḥ (Noah), ʿĀd and Thamud, the people of Ibrahim (Abraham), the dwellers [literally, comrades] of Madyan (Midian) and the cities overthrown [i.e. the people to whom Lūt (Lot) preached], to them came their Messengers with clear proofs. So it was not Allah who wronged them, but they used to wrong themselves."[33]

In Surah 7 (Al-ʾAʿrāf), Madyan is mentioned as one of several peoples who were warned by prophets to repent lest judgment fall on them. The story of Madyan is the last, coming after that of Lot preaching to his people (referring to the destruction of the Cities of the Plain). Madyan was warned by the prophet Shuʿaib to repent of practicing polytheism, using false weights and measures and lying in wait along the road. But they rejected Shuʿayb, and consequently were destroyed by a tremor (rajfa, v. 91). Abdullah Yusuf Ali in his commentary (1934) writes, "The fate of the Madyan people is described in the same terms as that of the Thamūd in verse 78 above. An earthquake seized them by night, and they were buried in their own homes, no longer to vex Allah's earth. But a supplementary detail is mentioned in [Quran] 26:189, 'the punishment of a day of overshadowing gloom,' which may be understood to mean a shower of ashes and cinders accompanying a volcanic eruption. Thus a day of terror drove them into their homes, and the earthquake finished them."[34] Excavations at the oasis of Al-Bad', identified as the city of Midian mentioned in classical and Islamic sources, have uncovered evidence of an occupation spanning from the 4th millennium BC.[35] [36]

Pottery

Midianite pottery, also called Qurayyah Painted Ware (QPW), is found at numerous sites stretching from the southern Levant to NW Saudi Arabia, the Hejaz; Qurayyah in NW Saudi Arabia is thought to be its original location of manufacture.[37] The pottery is bichrome / polychrome style and it dates as early as the 13th century BC; its many geometric, human, and animal motifs are painted in browns and dark reds on a pinkish-tan slip. "Midianite" pottery is found in its largest quantities at metallurgical sites in the southern Levant, especially Timna.[38] Because of the Mycenaean motifs on Midianite pottery, some scholars including George Mendenhall,[39] Peter Parr,[40] and Beno Rothenberg[41] have suggested that the Midianites were originally Sea Peoples who migrated from the Aegean region and imposed themselves on a pre-existing Semitic stratum. The question of the origin of the Midianites still remains open.

Midian Mountains

See also: Geography of Saudi Arabia, Geology of Saudi Arabia, List of mountains in Saudi Arabia, Geography of Jordan and Geology of Jordan.

Midian Mountains
Country:
Map:Saudi Arabia#Middle East#Asia
Range Coordinates:28.3°N 35.6°W
Region:Tabuk (KSA)
'Aqabah (Jordan)
Middle East

The Midian Mountains (Arabic: جِبَال مَدْيَن|Jibāl Madyan) are a mountain range in northwestern Saudi Arabia. They are considered to be either contiguous with the Hijaz Mountains to the south,[42] or a part of them.[43] The Hijaz are treated as part of the Sarawat range, sensu lato.[44] [45]

See also

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Luciani . Marta . Archaeology in the Land of Midian: Excavating the Qurayyah Oasis . . November–December 2023 . 49 . 4 .
  2. Web site: Genesis 25:1–2 . King James Version . Bible Gateway.
  3. Book: Bryce, Trevor . Trevor R. Bryce . 2009 . The Routledge Handbook of the Peoples and Places of Ancient Western Asia: From the Early Bronze Age to the Fall of the Persian Empire . 472 . . . 978-0-415-39485-7 .
  4. Une première mention de Madyan dans un texte épigraphique d'Arabie . Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres . Robin . Christian . 1 . 161 . 363–396 . Al-Ghabban . Ali . 10.3406/crai.2017.96407 . 2017 . 246891828 . fr.
  5. William J. Dumbrell, Midian: A Land or a League?, Vetus Testamentum, Vol. 25, Fasc. 2, No. 2a. Jubilee Number (May, 1975), pp. 323–37
  6. [Geoffrey W. Bromiley|Bromiley Geoffrey W.]
  7. Paul . Haupt . Midian und Sinai . Midian and Sinai . https://web.archive.org/web/20151217025653/http://menadoc.bibliothek.uni-halle.de/dmg/periodical/pageview/55820 . 2015-12-17 . Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft . 63 . 1909 . 56 . de . . 1 August 2015. quoted in Dumbrell
  8. "The Incident at Beth Baal Peor", The Tenth Generation: The Origins of the Biblical Tradition, 1973
  9. Jacob Edward Dunn 2015, ‘A Land Whose Stones Are Iron And From Whose Hills You May Mine Copper’: Metallurgy, Pottery, And The Midianite-Qenite Hypothesis. Thesis, University of Georgia. 129 pages
  10. Numbers 22:4, 7
  11. Book: Toorn, Karel van der . Family Religion in Babylonia, Ugarit, and Israel: Continuity and Change in the Forms of Religious Life . Leiden . . 283.
  12. Rothenberg, Beno. The Egyptian Mining Temple at Timna. Institute for Archaeo-Metallurgical Studies London: Thames and Hudson, 1988
  13. Book: Rothenberg, Beno . Timna: Valley of the Biblical Copper Mines . London . . 1972.
  14. Jacob Edward Dunn 2015, ‘A Land Whose Stones Are Iron And From Whose Hills You May Mine Copper’: Metallurgy, Pottery, And The Midianite-Qenite Hypothesis. Thesis, University of Georgia. 129 pages. Note 200, page 54
  15. Book: Avner, Uzi . Unearthing the Wilderness: Studies on the History and Archaeology of the Negev and Edom in the Iron Age . Peeters . 2014 . 978-90-429-2973-9 . 103–162 . Tebes . Juan Manuel . Egyptian Timna – Reconsidered . https://books.google.com/books?id=q9g1DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA103.
  16. Book: Rothenberg, Beno . Timna: Valley of the Biblical Copper Mines . London . . 1972.
  17. Michael M. . Homan . To Your Tents, O Israel!: The Terminology, Function, Form, and Symbolism of the Tents in the Bible and the Ancient Near East . Culture and History of the Ancient Near East . 12 . . 2002 . 118.
  18. Genesis 25:1–2
  19. Genesis 37:28
  20. Exodus 2:11–15
  21. Exodus 2:21
  22. Exodus 18
  23. Numbers 10:29–31
  24. Dunn . Jacob E. . 2014 . A God of Volcanoes: Did Yahwism Take Root in Volcanic Ashes? . Journal for the Study of the Old Testament . 38 . 4 . 387–424 . 10.1177/0309089214536484 . 0309-0892.
  25. Numbers 25:6–8, 14–15
  26. Numbers 25:17 and Numbers 31
  27. Web site: Pulpit Commentary and Gill's Exposition of the Bible . BibleHub . 1 July 2015.
  28. Deuteronomy 2:9
  29. Judges 6:1–6
  30. Judges 6:7–9
  31. Isaiah 60:6
  32. Web site: Surah Al-Qasas - 20-28 . May 19, 2021 . The Noble Quran.
  33. Web site: Muhammad Taqi-Ud-Din al-Halali and Muhammad Muhsin Khan's Translation . July 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20231004222525/https://www.alquranenglish.com/quran-surah-at-taubah-70-qs-9-70-in-arabic-and-english-translation. October 4, 2023.
  34. Book: Ali . Abdullah Yusuf . The Holy Quran – English Translation of the Meaning and Commentary . King Fahd Holy Qur-an Printing Complex . 4 March 2017.
  35. Charloux . Guillaume . Ahmed Sahlah . Samer . Badaiwi . Waleed Ali . January 2021 . Madian revealed? Assessing the history and archaeology of the oasis of al-Badʿ in northwestern Arabia . Semitica et Classica . 14 . 97–141 . 10.1484/j.sec.5.129522 . 2031-5937.
  36. Web site: Al-Badʿ - Archéologie - culture.fr . 2023-10-27 . archeologie.culture.gouv.fr.
  37. B. Rothenberg and J.Glass, "The Midianite Pottery," in Midian, Moab, and Edom: The History and Archaeology of the Late Bronze and Iron Age Jordan and North-West Arabia, JSOT Supplement Series 24, ed. John F.A. Sawyer and David J.A. Clines (Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1983), pp. 65–124.
  38. Tebes, "Pottery Makers and Premodern Exchange in the Fringes of Egypt: An Approximation to the Distribution of Iron Age Midianite Pottery," Buried History 43 (2007), pp. 11–26.
  39. George Mendenhall, "Qurayya and the Midianites," in Studies in the History of Arabia, Vol. 3, ed. A. R. Al-Ansary (Riyadh: King Saud University), pp. 137–45
  40. Peter J. Parr, "Further Reflections on Late Second Millennium Settlement in North West Arabia," in Retrieving the Past: Essays on Archaeological Research and Methodology, ed. J. D. Seger (Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, 1996), pp. 213–18.
  41. Rothenberg, "Egyptian Chariots, Midianites from Hijaz/ Midian (Northwest Arabia) and Amalekites from the Negev in the Timna Mines: Rock drawings in the Ancient Copper Mines of the Arabah – new aspects of the region's history II," Institute for Archaeo-Metallurgical Studies, newsletter no. 23 (2003), p. 12.
  42. Book: Ghazanfar . Shahina A. . Shahina A. Ghazanfar . Vegetation of the Arabian Peninsula . Fisher . Martin . 2013-04-17 . . 978-9-4017-3637-4 . . 71–94 . 4.
  43. Book: Scoville, Sheila A. . Gazetteer of Arabia: a geographical and tribal history of the Arabian Peninsula . 2 . 3 . 288 . Akademische Druck- u. Verlagsanstalt . 0-7614-7571-0 . 2006.
  44. Book: Mandal, Ram Bahadur . Patterns of Regional Geography: World regions . Concept Publishing Company . VI: A Regional Geography . 354 . 8-1702-2292-3 . . https://books.google.com/books?id=XWwCHWwgKt0C&q=sarawat+mountains&pg=PA354 . 1990 .
  45. Book: Nasr, Seyyed Hossein . Hossein Nasr . Mecca the Blessed, Medina the Radiant: The Holiest Cities of Islam . . 1: The Holiest Cities of Islam . 978-1-4629-1365-7 . 2013.