George:

On Thu, Apr 11, 2013 at 6:14 PM, George Athas <[email protected]>wrote:

>   Yes, the Philistines are generally understood to have come from an
> original Aegean area. I believe it's surmised that Cretans were probably
> settled in the areas of the Negev by the Egyptians who repelled the attacks
> of the Philistines and other Sea People in 1175 BC, and then settled them
> as mercenaries and a kind of 'buffer' people throughout the Levant.
>

The identity and date of the Sea Peoples’ attack is open to question, some
historians date it as late as late seventh century, early sixth century BC.
The Philistines predate even your early date given above.

>
>  So you're identifying the Pelethites as 'hoplites', taking the ה as part
> of the noun, rather than the article?
>

I’m taking this as a possibility, not a fixed. What seems pretty clear that
this is a loan word into Hebrew from another language, most likely from
Philistine. Was it a loan word into Philistine? If so, from where? As far
as Greek is concerned, was it a loan word into Greek? Possibly as early as
Linear B?


> Interesting. It does break the symmetry with Cherethites, though, which
> evidently does have the article, but that's no big deal.
>

Were these names of peoples hired as mercenaries, or divisions of David’s
army according to specialized skill?


> The problem, though, is that 'hoplite' is a Greek word, not Semitic, and I
> don't think you find any hoplites before about 600 BC at the earliest. I
> don't think Homer mentions hoplites at all, does he? And if he doesn't, it
> would suggest there were no hoplites before the 8th century BC. So the
> suggestion, as much as I like it, would appear to be quite anachronistic.
> The only alternative is to suggest that the text is written at a time when
> hoplites were known throughout the wider region, which would probably be
> the Persian Era.
>

It’s hard to date terms, as the surviving literature is somewhat sparse.
For example, I was told that Dionysios is mentioned in Linear B texts, but
not again until fifth or fourth centuries BC, yet there’s no reason to
believe that the term was not used continuously during the intervening
period. So likewise, with hoplite, we have no earliest date, all we have is
the earliest date of a surviving text.

>
>
>  *GEORGE ATHAS*
> *Dean of Research,*
> *Moore Theological College *(moore.edu.au)
> *Sydney, Australia*
>

Karl W. Randolph.
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