Twelve Tribes of Israel explained

The Twelve Tribes of Israel (Hebrew: {{Script/Hebrew|שִׁבְטֵי־יִשְׂרָאֵל) are, according to Hebrew scriptures, the descendants of the biblical patriarch Jacob (also known as Israel), who collectively form the Israelite nation. The tribes were through his twelve sons through his wives, Leah and Rachel, and his concubines, Bilhah and Zilpah. In modern scholarship, there is skepticism as to whether there ever were twelve Israelite tribes, with the use of the number 12 thought more likely to signify a symbolic tradition as part of a national founding myth, although some scholars disagree with this view.[1]

Biblical narrative

Genealogy

Jacob, later called Israel, was the second-born son of Isaac and Rebecca, the younger twin brother of Esau, and the grandson of Abraham and Sarah. According to biblical texts, he was chosen by God to be the patriarch of the Israelite nation. From what is known of Jacob, he had two wives, sisters Leah and Rachel, and two concubines, Bilhah and Zilpah. The twelve sons form the basis for the twelve tribes of Israel, listed in the order from oldest to youngest: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Dan, Naphtali, Gad, Asher, Issachar, Zebulun, Joseph, and Benjamin. Jacob was known to display favoritism among his children, particularly for Joseph and Benjamin, the sons of his favorite wife, Rachel, and so the tribes themselves were not treated equally in a divine sense. Joseph, despite being the second-youngest son, received double the inheritance of his brothers, treated as if he were the firstborn son instead of Reuben, and so his tribe was later split into two tribes, named after his sons, Ephraim and Manasseh.[2]

Sons and tribes

The Israelites were the descendants of twelve sons of the biblical patriarch Jacob. Jacob also had at least one daughter, Dinah, whose descendants were not recognized as a tribe. The sons of Jacob were born in Padan-aram from different mothers, as follows:[3]

27:12–13 KJV lists the twelve tribes:

Jacob elevated the descendants of Ephraim and Manasseh (the two sons of Joseph and his Egyptian wife Asenath)[4] to the status of full tribes in their own right due to Joseph receiving a double portion after Reuben lost his birth right because of his transgression with Bilhah.[5]

In the biblical narrative the period from the conquest of Canaan under the leadership of Joshua until the formation of the United Kingdom of Israel passed with the tribes forming a loose confederation, described in the Book of Judges. Modern scholarship has called into question the beginning, middle, and end of this picture[6] [7] and the account of the conquest under Joshua has largely been abandoned.[8] [9] [10] The Bible's depiction of the 'period of the Judges' is widely considered doubtful.[6] [11] [12] The extent to which a united Kingdom of Israel ever existed is also a matter of ongoing dispute.[13] [14] [15]

Living in exile in the sixth century BC, the prophet Ezekiel has a vision for the restoration of Israel,[16] of a future in which the twelve tribes of Israel are living in their land again.[17]

Land allotment

According to Joshua 13–19, the Land of Israel was divided into twelve sections corresponding to the twelve tribes of Israel. However, the tribes receiving land differed from the biblical tribes. The Tribe of Levi had no land appropriation but had six Cities of Refuge under their administration as well as the Temple in Jerusalem. There was no land allotment for the Tribe of Joseph, but Joseph's two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, received their father's land portion.[18] [19]

Thus the tribes receiving an allotment were:[20]

  1. Reuben
  2. Simeon
  3. Ephraim
  4. Judah
  5. Issachar
  6. Zebulun
  7. Dan
  8. Naphtali
  9. Gad
  10. Asher
  11. Manasseh
  12. Benjamin

Descendants

In Christianity

The twelve tribes of Israel are referred to in the New Testament. In the gospels of Matthew (KJV) and Luke (KJV), Jesus anticipates that in the Kingdom of God his disciples will "sit on [twelve] thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel". The Epistle of James (KJV) addresses his audience as "the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad".

The Book of Revelation (KJV) gives a list of the twelve tribes. However, the Tribe of Dan is omitted while Joseph is mentioned alongside Manasseh. In the vision of the Heavenly Jerusalem, the tribes' names (the names of the twelve sons of Jacob) are written on the city gates (48:30-35 KJV & 21:12-13 KJV).

In the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a patriarchal blessing usually contains a declaration of the lineage of the recipient of blessing in relation to the twelve tribes of Israel.[26]

In Islam

The Quran (7th century CE) states that the people of Moses were split into twelve tribes. Surah 7 (Al-A'raf) verse 160 says:

"We split them up into twelve tribal communities, and We revealed to Moses, when his people asked him for water, [saying], ‘Strike the rock with your cane,’ whereat twelve fountains gushed forth from it. Every tribe came to know its drinking-place. And We shaded them with clouds, and We sent down to them manna and quails: ‘Eat of the good things We have provided you.’ And they did not wrong Us, but they used to wrong [only] themselves."[27]

Historicity

Scholarly examination

For thousands of years, Christians and Jews have accepted the history of the twelve tribes as fact. Since the 19th century, however, historical criticism has examined the veracity of the historical account; whether the twelve tribes ever existed as they are described, the historicity of the eponymous ancestors, and even whether the earliest version of this tradition assumes the existence of twelve tribes.[28]

Biblical lists of tribes, not all of which number 12, include the following:

Theories of origin

Scholars such as Max Weber (in Ancient Judaism) and Ronald M. Glassman (2017) concluded that there never was a fixed number of tribes. Instead, the idea that there were always twelve tribes should be regarded as part of the Israelite national founding myth: the number 12 was not a real number, but an ideal number, which had symbolic significance in Near Eastern cultures with duodecimal counting systems, from which, among other things, the modern 12-hour clock is derived.[30]

Biblical scholar Arthur Peake saw the tribes originating as postdiction, as eponymous metaphor giving an aetiology of the connectedness of the tribe to others in the Israelite confederation.[32]

Translator Paul Davidson argued:[33] "The stories of Jacob and his children, then, are not accounts of historical Bronze Age people. Rather, they tell us how much later Jews and Israelites understood themselves, their origins, and their relationship to the land, within the context of folktales that had evolved over time." He goes on to argue that most of the tribal names are "not personal names, but the names of ethnic groups, geographical regions, and local deities. E.g. Benjamin, meaning "son of the south" (the location of its territory relative to Samaria), or Asher, a Phoenician territory whose name may be an allusion to the goddess Asherah."

Historian Immanuel Lewy[34] [35] in Commentary mentions "the Biblical habit of representing clans as persons. In the Bible, the twelve tribes of Israel are sons of a man called Jacob or Israel, as Edom or Esau is the brother of Jacob, and Ishmael and Isaac are the sons of Abraham. Elam and Ashur, names of two ancient nations, are sons of a man called Shem. Sidon, a Phoenician town, is the first-born of Canaan; the lands of Egypt and Abyssinia are the sons of Ham. This kind of mythological geography is widely known among all ancient peoples. Archaeology has found that many of these personal names of ancestors originally were the names of clans, tribes, localities, or nations. […] if the names of the twelve tribes of Israel are those of mythological ancestors and not of historical persons, then many stories of the patriarchal and Mosaic age lose their historic validity. They may indeed partly reflect dim reminiscences of the Hebrews' tribal past, but in their specific detail they are fiction."[36]

Norman Gottwald argued that the division into twelve tribes originated as an administrative scheme under King David.[37] [38]

Additionally, the Mesha Stele (carved c. 840 BCE) mentions Omri as King of Israel and also mentions "the men of Gad".[39] [40]

Levite Y-chromosome studies

Recent studies of genetic markers within Jewish populations strongly suggest that modern Ashkenazi Levites (Jewish males who claim patrilineal descent from the Tribe of Levi) are descendants of a single Levite ancestor who came to Europe from the Middle East roughly 1,750 years ago.[41] The growth of this specific lineage aligns with the expansion patterns seen in other founding groups of Ashkenazi Jews. This means that a relatively small number of original ancestors have had a large impact on the genetic makeup of today's Ashkenazi population.

Attributed coats of arms

See also: Attributed arms.

Attributed arms are Western European coats of arms given retrospectively to persons real or fictitious who died before the start of the age of heraldry in the latter half of the 12th century.

Attributed arms of the Twelve Tribes from the Portuguese Thesouro de Nobreza, 1675

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Blum, Erhard . Saul, Benjamin, and the Emergence of Monarchy in Israel: Biblical and Archaeological Perspectives . SBL Press . 2020 . 978-0-88414-451-9 . 213 . Krause . Joachim J. . The Israelite Tribal System: Literary Fiction or Social Reality? . Sergi . Omer . Weingart . Kristin . https://books.google.com/books?id=wH3-DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA201.
  2. Web site: The King James Bible. Wikisource.
  3. 35:23-26 KJV
  4. 41:50 KJV
  5. 35:22 KJV
    5:1,2 KJV; 48:5 KJV
  6. "In any case, it is now widely agreed that the so-called 'patriarchal/ancestral period' is a later 'literary' construct, not a period in the actual history of the ancient world. The same is the case for the 'exodus' and the 'wilderness period', and more and more widely for the 'period of the Judges.'" Book: Paula M. McNutt. Reconstructing the Society of Ancient Israel. registration. 1 January 1999. Westminster John Knox Press. 978-0-664-22265-9. 42.
  7. Book: Alan T. Levenson. The Making of the Modern Jewish Bible: How Scholars in Germany, Israel, and America Transformed an Ancient Text. 16 August 2011. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 978-1-4422-0518-5. 202.
  8. "Besides the rejection of the Albrightian ‘conquest' model, the general consensus among OT scholars is that the Book of Joshua has no value in the historical reconstruction. They see the book as an ideological retrojection from a later period — either as early as the reign of Josiah or as late as the Hasmonean period."Book: David W. Baker. Bill T. Arnold. K. Lawson Younger Jr.. Early Israel in Recent Biblical Scholarship. The Face of Old Testament Studies: A Survey of Contemporary Approaches. https://books.google.com/books?id=vO8XRZyhvpMC&pg=PA200. 1 October 2004. Baker Academic. 978-0-8010-2871-7. 200.
  9. "It behooves us to ask, in spite of the fact that the overwhelming consensus of modern scholarship is that Joshua is a pious fiction composed by the deuteronomistic school, how does and how has the Jewish community dealt with these foundational narratives, saturated as they are with acts of violence against others?" Book: Carl S. Ehrlich. Jewish Studies at the Turn of the Twentieth Century, Volume 1: Biblical, Rabbinical, and Medieval Studies. https://books.google.com/books?id=5ZlRPQJ8Qd4C&pg=PA117. 1999. Joshua, Judaism and Genocide. BRILL. 90-04-11554-4. 117.
  10. "Recent decades, for example, have seen a remarkable reevaluation of evidence concerning the conquest of the land of Canaan by Joshua. As more sites have been excavated, there has been a growing consensus that the main story of Joshua, that of a speedy and complete conquest (e.g. 11:23 KJV: 'Thus Joshua conquered the whole country, just as the had promised Moses') is contradicted by the archaeological record, though there are indications of some destruction and conquest at the appropriate time. Book: The Jewish Study Bible. Second. 17 October 2014. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-939387-9. 951. Adele Berlin. Marc Zvi Brettler.
  11. "The biblical text does not shed light on the history of the highlands in the early Iron I. The conquest and part of the period of the judges narratives should be seen, first and foremost, as a Deuteronomist construct that used myths, tales, and etiological traditions in order to convey the theology and territorial ideology of the late monarchic author(s) (e.g., Nelson 1981; Van Seters 1990; Finkelstein and Silberman 2001, 72–79, Römer 2007, 83–90)." Book: Israel Finkelstein. The Forgotten Kingdom: The Archaeology and History of Northern Israel.. 2013. Society of Biblical Literature. 978-1-58983-912-0. 24.
  12. "In short, the so-called ‘period of the judges’ was probably the creation of a person or persons known as the deuteronomistic historian."Book: J. Clinton McCann. Judges. 2002. Westminster John Knox Press. 978-0-8042-3107-7. 5.
  13. "Although most scholars accept the historicity of the united monarchy (although not in the scale and form described in the Bible; see Dever 1996; Na'aman 1996; Fritz 1996, and bibliography there), its existence has been questioned by other scholars (see Whitelam 1996b; see also Grabbe 1997, and bibliography there). The scenario described below suggests that some important changes did take place at the time." Book: Avraham Faust. Avraham Faust. Israel's Ethnogenesis: Settlement, Interaction, Expansion and Resistance. 1 April 2016. Routledge. 978-1-134-94215-2. 172.
  14. "In some sense most scholars today agree on a 'minimalist' point of view in this regard. It does not seem reasonable any longer to claim that the united monarchy ruled over most of Palestine and Syria." Book: Gunnar Lebmann. Andrew G. Vaughn. Andrew G. Vaughn. Ann E. Killebrew. Ann E. Killebrew. Jerusalem in Bible and Archaeology: The First Temple Period. 2003. Society of Biblical Lit. 978-1-58983-066-0. 156.
  15. "There seems to be a consensus that the power and size of the kingdom of Solomon, if it ever existed, has been hugely exaggerated." Book: Diana Vikander Edelman. Ehud Ben Zvi. Philip R. Davies. Why do we Know about Amos?. The Production of Prophecy: Constructing Prophecy and Prophets in Yehud. https://books.google.com/books?id=zWTfBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA71. 18 December 2014. Routledge. 978-1-317-49031-9. 71.
  16. 47:13 KJV
  17. Book: Michael Chyutin. Architecture and Utopia in the Temple Era. 1 January 2006. A&C Black. 978-0-567-03054-2. 170.
  18. 48:5 HE
  19. 14:14 HE
  20. Web site: The Twelve Tribes of Israel. www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org.
  21. "Simeon, Tribe of" (Jewish Encyclopedia 1906)
  22. http://www.cjnews.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=20003&Itemid=86 ‘Lost tribe of Israel’ found in southern India
  23. Web site: MK Kara: Druze are Descended from Jews. Lev. David. 25 October 2010. Israel National News. Arutz Sheva. 13 April 2011.
  24. https://books.google.com/books?id=sjO8JOSKDCMC From Tragedy to Triumph: The Politics Behind the Rescue of Ethiopian Jewry
  25. Web site: India: Lost tribe of Menashe celebrates Sukkot. September 20, 2021. Israel365 News | Latest News. Biblical Perspective..
  26. Web site: Patriarchal Blessings . Gospel Topics . The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints . 9 February 2022.
  27. al-quran.info/#7:160/1
  28. Web site: Did Israel Always Have Twelve Tribes? . www.thetorah.com.
  29. Web site: The Twelve (or So) Tribes of Israel. Paul. D. July 9, 2014.
  30. Book: Glassman, Ronald M. . 2017 . The Origins of Democracy in Tribes, City-States and Nation-States . Cham . Springer . 632 . 10.1007/978-3-319-51695-0_60 . 978-3-319-51695-0 . 25 May 2021.
  31. The Twelve Tribes in the Song of Deborah. De Moor, Johannes C.. 1993. Vetus Testamentum. 43. 4. 483–494 . JSTOR. 10.2307/1518497. 1518497.
  32. https://books.google.com/books?id=vjsJAQAAIAAJ Peake's commentary on the Bible
  33. Web site: Is the NIV a deliberate mistranslation? | Psephizo. July 16, 2015.
  34. Web site: The Birth of the Bible, by Immanuel Lewy. July 1, 1951.
  35. Web site: Immanuel Lewy b. 19 Sep 1884 Berlin, Germany d. 2 Feb 1970 New York, NY, USA: Blank Family. blankgenealogy.com.
  36. Web site: The Study of Man: Archaeology and the Bible's Historical Truth. May 1, 1954. Commentary Magazine.
  37. Book: Gottwald, Norman. Tribes of Yahweh: A Sociology of the Religion of Liberated Israel, 1250-1050 BCE. October 1, 1999. A&C Black. 9781841270265. Google Books.
  38. "All These Are the Twelve Tribes of Israel": The Origins of Israel's Kinship Identity. Kristin . Weingart. March 1, 2019. Near Eastern Archaeology. 82. 1. 24–31. 10.1086/703323. 167013727.
  39. Web site: The Tribe of Gad and The Mesha Stele – TheTorah.com. www.thetorah.com.
  40. Web site: Newly deciphered Moabite inscription may be first use of written word 'Hebrews'. Times of Israel.
  41. Behar . Doron M. . Saag . Lauri . Karmin . Monika . Gover . Meir G. . Wexler . Jeffrey D. . Sanchez . Luisa Fernanda . Greenspan . Elliott . Kushniarevich . Alena . Davydenko . Oleg . Sahakyan . Hovhannes . Yepiskoposyan . Levon . Boattini . Alessio . Sarno . Stefania . Pagani . Luca . Carmi . Shai . 2017-11-02 . The genetic variation in the R1a clade among the Ashkenazi Levites' Y chromosome . Scientific Reports . en . 7 . 1 . 14969 . 10.1038/s41598-017-14761-7 . 2045-2322 . 5668307 . 29097670. 2017NatSR...714969B .