Karl:  

You wrote:  “Please don’t parade your ignorance. The effects of the 
Mediterranean climate are not limited to within a few miles of the coast, yet 
Hebron is within a few miles of the coast.”

In fact, the city of Hebron is 38 miles east of the Mediterranean Sea, up high 
in the mountains.  The city of Hebron is only 18 miles west of the desolate 
Dead Sea.


The issues you raise about the climate at the city of Hebron are of critical 
importance.  Both the traditional view and the view of today’s university 
scholars are along the following lines:
“In the Negev, in Beersheba, and beyond Mount Hebron, rainfall is slight, 
pasture-land is poor, springs are meagre, and the population is sparse. Yet 
here, alone with his tents, Abraham would build his home, remote from tribe and 
nation….  The northern-born sheep and cattle had grown up in a cool climate, 
with an abundance of water and soft grass, and found it hard to adapt to the 
parched and arid south.”  Moshe Dayan, “Living with the Bible” (1978), at p. 
15. 



But does that standard view of the Patriarchs’ Hebron make any logical sense, 
and does it comport with what the text in fact says?

1.  Genesis 13: 9, 11 says that Abraham went the opposite direction from Bethel 
as Lot, and that Lot went east.  Thus the text indicates that Abraham went west 
of Bethel, which would bring Abraham to one of the best places in all of Canaan 
for a huge flock of sheep and goats:  the Aijalon Valley, in the northern 
Shephelah.

2.  Genesis 37: 14 says that the Patriarchs’ Hebron is a “valley”.  That fits 
the low-lying Aijalon Valley perfectly, but does not fit the towering mountains 
that surround the city of Hebron.

3.  The Bronze Age name of the city of Hebron was “Qiltu”, or some variant 
thereof.  Moses would not have known “Hebron” as the name of the city just 
northwest of the Judean Desert.  [Valleys in Bronze Age Canaan had no formal 
names.  The name “Aijalon Valley” was unknown in the ancient world.  The 
Patriarchs would have to come up with a nickname for a valley, unlike reporting 
the historical name of a city.]

4.  In World War I, the camels at the city of Hebron died, because it was too 
cold and damp.  In the Early and Middle Bronze Ages, the climate was even 
cooler and wetter, so that Abraham’s camels could not have survived the winters 
at the city of Hebron.

5.  The city of Hebron receives almost no rainfall at all during the long, hot 
summer.  Though conditions in the Early and Middle Bronze Age would admittedly 
have been better than they are today, still there is not enough water for a 
huge flock of sheep and goats in the summer at the city of Hebron.  Yet look 
how Abraham fared at the Patriarchs’ Hebron, as described by his faithful 
servant:  “The LORD has greatly blessed my master, and he has become great.  He 
has given him flocks and herds, silver and gold, male servants and female 
servants, camels and donkeys.”  Genesis 24: 35.  That is simply not possible in 
the rugged mountains that surround the city of Hebron.  There’s not enough 
water in the long, hot summer for goats and sheep or other livestock, and it’s 
too cold and damp in the winter for camels.

6.  Genesis 14: 14 tells us that Abraham had 318 armed retainers.  Why would a 
powerful man like that choose to sojourn way up in the rugged mountains that 
surround the city of Hebron, instead of in the lovely Aijalon Valley west of 
Bethel?

7.  In the Early and Middle Bronze Age, the city of Hebron was a true fortress 
with massive walls.  Why is that never mentioned in the Biblical text?

8.  In the entirety of Genesis, no one is ever said to go “up” to the 
Patriarchs’ Hebron.  That makes sense if X-BR-W-N is a Patriarchal nickname for 
the low-lying verdant Aijalon Valley, but is not possible if the Patriarchs 
routinely sojourned in the rugged mountains that surround the city of Hebron.

9.  Genesis 24: 62 says that Isaac chose to live south of Abraham.  If Abraham 
was living at the city of Hebron, that means that Isaac chose to live either in 
the heart of the Negev Desert, or in the eastern Sinai Desert.  What sense does 
that make?  Why would Isaac choose to sojourn in a desert, and even after 
Abraham’s death, stay there?

10.  The Biblical text confirms what logic dictates:  the Patriarchs chose to 
sojourn in the best parts of Canaan for tending a huge flock of sheep and 
goats:  the Shephelah and Upper Galilee [GRR/“Gerar”].  The Patriarchs sensibly 
never went anywhere near the mountainous city of Hebron, which was a terrible 
place for sheep and goats in the long, hot summers.  The reason why the city 
name Qiltu does not appear in Genesis is because the Patriarchs never went 
anywhere in the vicinity of that mountainous place.  Rather, the Patriarchs’ 
X-BR-W-N is the lovely Aijalon Valley in the northern Shephelah.  That conforms 
with both logic and what the Biblical texts says and does not say. 

Jim Stinehart
Evanston, Illinois




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