Page:A critical and exegetical commentary on Genesis (1910).djvu/302

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doubtless identical with the E-trus-cans of Italy.[1] This brilliant conjecture has since been confirmed by the discovery of the name Turuša amongst the seafaring peoples who invaded Egypt in the reign of Merneptah (Mey. GA1, i. § 260; W. M. Müller, AE, 356 ff.).


6, 7, 20. The Hamitic or Southern Group: in Africa and S Arabia, but including the Canaanites of Palestine.

                         <g>Ḥa</g>m.
                                |
                           ——————————————————
                           | | | |
                       1. Kush. 2. Miẓraim. 3. Puṭ. 4. Canaan.
                           |
      ———————————————————————————
      | | | | |

5. Ṣeba. 6. Ḥavilah. 7. Ṣabtah. 8. Ra'mah. 9. Ṣabtekah.
                                              |
                                         ———————
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                                    10. Sheba. 11. Dedan.


(1) (Symbol missingHebrew characters) (G (Symbol missingGreek characters), but elsewhere, (Symbol missingGreek characters))] the land and people S of Egypt (Nubia),—the Ethiopians of the Greeks, the Kôš of the Eg. monuments:[2] cf. Is. 181, Jer. 1323, Ezk. 2910, Zeph. 310 etc. Ass. Kusu occurs repeatedly in the same sense on inscrs. of Esarhaddon and Asshurbanipal; and only four passages of Esarhaddon are claimed by Wi. for the hypothesis of a south Arabian Kusu (KAT3, 144). There is no reason to doubt that in this v. the African Kush is meant. That the


5. The subscription to the first division of the Table is not quite in order. We miss the formula (Symbol missingHebrew characters) (cf. vv.20. 31), which is here necessary to the sense, and must be inserted, not (with We.) at the beginning of the v., but immediately before (Symbol missingHebrew characters). The clause (Symbol missingHebrew characters)(Symbol missingHebrew characters) is then seen to belong to v.4, and to mean that the Mediterranean coasts were peopled from the four centres just named as occupied by sons of Javan. Although these places were probably all at one time Phœnician colonies, it is not to be inferred that the writer confused the Ionians with Phœnicians. He may be thinking of the native population of regions known to Israel through the Phœnicians, or of the Mycenean Greeks, whose colonising enterprise is now believed to be of earlier date than the Phœnician (Mey. EB, 3736 f.).—(Symbol missingHebrew characters)] construed like (Symbol missingHebrew characters) in 919 (J); ct. 1032.—(Symbol missingHebrew characters)] only again Zeph. 211. Should we read (Symbol missingHebrew characters) (Is. 1111 2415, Est. 101)? (Symbol missingHebrew characters) (for (Symbol missingHebrew characters), perhaps from [root] ´away, "betake oneself") seems to be a seafarer's word denoting the place one makes for (for shelter, etc.); hence both "coast" and "island" (the latter also in Phœn.). In Heb. the pl. came to be used of distant lands in general (Is. 411. 5 424 515 etc., Jer. 3110 etc.)

  1. Thuc. iv. 109; Her. i. 57, 94; Strabo, v. ii. 2, iii. 5: other reff. in Tu. ad loc.
  2. See Steindorff, BA, i. 593 f.