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2 definitions found
From:
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Philistines
(
Gen
. 10:14, R.V.;
but
in
A.V., "
Philistim
"),
a
tribe
allied
to
the
Phoenicians
.
They
were
a
branch
of
the
primitive
race
which
spread
over
the
whole
district
of
the
Lebanon
and
the
valley
of
the
Jordan
,
and
Crete
and
other
Mediterranean
islands
.
Some
suppose
them
to
have
been
a
branch
of
the
Rephaim
(2
Sam
.
21:16-22).
In
the
time
of
Abraham
they
inhabited
the
south-west
of
Judea
,
Abimelech
of
Gerar
being
their
king
(
Gen
. 21:32, 34;
26:1).
They
are
,
however
,
not
noticed
among
the
Canaanitish
tribes
mentioned
in
the
Pentateuch
.
They
are
spoken
of
by
Amos
(9:7)
and
Jeremiah
(47:4)
as
from
Caphtor
, i.e.,
probably
Crete
,
or
,
as
some
think
,
the
Delta
of
Egypt
.
In
the
whole
record
from
Exodus
to
Samuel
they
are
represented
as
inhabiting
the
tract
of
country
which
lay
between
Judea
and
Egypt
(
Ex
. 13:17; 15:14, 15;
Josh
. 13:3; 1
Sam
. 4).
This
powerful
tribe
made
frequent
incursions
against
the
Hebrews
.
There
was
almost
perpetual
war
between
them
.
They
sometimes
held
the
tribes
,
especially
the
southern
tribes
,
in
degrading
servitude
(
Judg
. 15:11; 1
Sam
. 13:19-22);
at
other
times
they
were
defeated
with
great
slaughter
(1
Sam
. 14:1-47;
17).
These
hostilities
did
not
cease
till
the
time
of
Hezekiah
(2
Kings
18:8),
when
they
were
entirely
subdued
.
They
still
,
however
,
occupied
their
territory
,
and
always
showed
their
old
hatred
to
Israel
(
Ezek
. 25:15-17).
They
were
finally
conquered
by
the
Romans
.
The
Philistines
are
called
Pulsata
or
Pulista
on
the
Egyptian
monuments
;
the
land
of
the
Philistines
(
Philistia
)
being
termed
Palastu
and
Pilista
in
the
Assyrian
inscriptions
.
They
occupied
the
five
cities
of
Gaza
,
Ashkelon
,
Ashdod
,
Ekron
,
and
Gath
,
in
the
south-western
corner
of
Canaan
,
which
belonged
to
Egypt
up
to
the
closing
days
of
the
Nineteenth
Dynasty
.
The
occupation
took
place
during
the
reign
of
Rameses
III
.
of
the
Twentieth
Dynasty
.
The
Philistines
had
formed
part
of
the
great
naval
confederacy
which
attacked
Egypt
,
but
were
eventually
repulsed
by
that
Pharaoh
,
who
,
however
,
could
not
dislodge
them
from
their
settlements
in
Palestine
.
As
they
did
not
enter
Palestine
till
the
time
of
the
Exodus
,
the
use
of
the
name
Philistines
in
Gen
. 26:1
must
be
proleptic
.
Indeed
the
country
was
properly
Gerar
,
as
in
ch
. 20.
They
are
called
Allophyli
, "
foreigners
,"
in
the
Septuagint
,
and
in
the
Books
of
Samuel
they
are
spoken
of
as
uncircumcised
.
It
would
therefore
appear
that
they
were
not
of
the
Semitic
race
,
though
after
their
establishment
in
Canaan
they
adopted
the
Semitic
language
of
the
country
.
We
learn
from
the
Old
Testament
that
they
came
from
Caphtor
,
usually
supposed
to
be
Crete
.
From
Philistia
the
name
of
the
land
of
the
Philistines
came
to
be
extended
to
the
whole
of
"
Palestine
."
Many
scholars
identify
the
Philistines
with
the
Pelethites
of
2
Sam
. 8:18.
From:
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
Philistines
,
those
who
dwell
in
villages
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