Palestina And Palestine
(land of strangers). These two forms occur in the Authorized Version but four times in all, always in poetical passages; the
first in (Exodus 15:14) and Isai 14:29 The second (Joel 3:4) In each case the Hebrew is Pelesheth, a word found, besides the above, only in (Psalms 60:8; 83:7; 87:4) and Psal 108:9 In all which our translators have rendered it by “Philistia” or “Philistines.” Palestine in the Authorized Version really
means nothing but Philistia. The original Hebrew word Pelesheth to the Hebrews signified merely the long and broad strip of
maritime plain inhabited by their encroaching neighbors; nor does it appear that at first it signified more to the Greeks.
As lying next the sea, and as being also the high road from Egypt to Phoenicia and the richer regions no of it, the Philistine
plain became sooner known to the western world than the country farther inland, and was called by them Syria Palestina-Philistine
Syria. From thence it was gradually extended to the country farther inland, till in the Roman and later Greek authors, both
heathen sad Christian, it became the usual appellation for the whole country of the Jews, both west and east of Jordan. The
word is now so commonly employed in our more familiar language to destinate the whole country of Israel that although biblically
a misnomer, it has been chosen here as the most convenient heading under which to give a general description of THE HOLY LAND,
embracing those points which have not been treated under the separate headings of cities or tribes. This description will
most conveniently divide itself Into three sections:— I. The Names applied to the country of Israel in the Bible and elsewhere.
II. The Land; its situation, aspect, climb, physical characteristics in connection with its history, its structure, botany
and natural history. III. The History of the country is so fully given under its various headings throughout the work that
it is unnecessary to recapitulate it here. I. [THE Names].—Palestine, then, is designated in the Bible by more than one name.
- During the patriarchal period, the conquest and the age of the Judges and also where those early periods are referred to in
the later literature (as) (Psalms 105:11) it is spoken of as “Canaan,” or more frequently “the land of Canaan,” meaning thereby the country west of the Jordan, as
opposed to “the land of Gilead.” on the east.
- During the monarchy the name usually, though not frequently, employed is “land of Israel.” (1 Samuel 13:19)
- Between the captivity and the time of our Lord the name “Judea” had extended itself from the southern portion to the whole
of the country, and even that beyond the Jordan. (Matthew 19:1; Mark 10:1)
- The Roman division of the country hardly coincided with the biblical one, and it does not appear that the Romans had any distinct
name for that which we understand by Palestine.
- Soon after the Christian era we find the name Palestina in possession of the country.
- The name most frequently used throughout the middle ages, and down to our own time, is Terra Sancta—the Holy Land. II. THE
LAND.-The holy land is not in size or physical characteristics proportioned to its moral and historical position as the theatre
of the most momentous events in the world’s history. It is but a strip of country about the size of Wales, less than 140 miles
in length and barely 40 in average breadth, on the very frontier of the East, hemmed in between the Mediterranean Sea on the
one hand and the enormous trench of the Jordan valley on the other, by which it is effectually cut off from the mainland of
Asia behind it. On the north it is shut in by the high ranges of Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon, and by the chasm of the Litany.
On the south it is no less enclosed by the arid and inhospitable deserts of the upper pert of the peninsula of Sinai.
- Its position.—Its position on the map of the world—as the world was when the holy land first made its appearance in history—is
a remarkable one. (a) It was on the very outpost— an the extremist western edge of the East. On the shore of the Mediterranean
it stands, as if it had advanced as far as possible toward the west, separated therefrom by that which, when the time arrived
proved to be no barrier, but the readiest medium of communication-the wide waters of the “great sea.” Thus it was open to
all the gradual influences of the rising communities of the West, while it was saved from the retrogression and decrepitude
which have ultimately been the doom of all purely eastern states whose connections were limited to the East only. (b) There
was, however, one channel, and but one, by which it could reach and be reached by the great Oriental empires. The rivals road
by which the two great rivals of the ancient world could approach one another—by which alone Egypt could get to Assyria and
Assyria to lay along the broad hat strip of coast which formed the maritime portion of the holy land, and thence by the plain
of the Lebanon to the Euphrates. (c) After this the holy land became (like the Netherlands in Europe) the convenient arena
on which in successive ages the hostile powers who contended for the empire of the East fought their battles.
- Physical features.—Palestine is essentially a mountainous country. Not that if contains independent mountain chains, as in
Greece for example but that every part of the highland is in greater or less undulation. But it is not only a mountainous
country. The mass of hills which occupies the centre of the country is bordered or framed on both sides, east and west, by
a broad belt of lowland, sunk deep below its own level. The slopes or cliffs which form, as if it were, the retaining walls
of this depression are furrowed and cleft by the torrent beds which discharge the waters of the hills and form the means of
communication between the upper and lower level. On the west this lowland interposes between the mountains and the sea, and
is the plain of Philistia and of Sharon. On the east it is the broad bottom of the Jordan valley, deep down in which rushed
the one river of Palestine to its grave in, the Dead Sea. Such is the first general impression of the physiognomy of the land.
It is a physiognomy compounded of the three main features already named—the plains the highland hills, and the torrent beds
features which are marked in the words of its earliest describers, (Numbers 13:29; Joshua 11:16; 12:8) and which must be comprehended by every one who wishes to understand the country and the intimate connection existing between
its structure and its history. About halfway up the coast the maritime plain is suddenly interrupted by a long ridge thrown
out from the central mass, rising considerably shove the general level and terminating in a bold promontory on the very edge
of the Mediterranean. This ridge is Mount Carmel. On its upper side the plain, as if to compensate for its temporary displacement,
invades the centre of the country, and forms an undulating hollow right across it from the Mediterranean to the Jordan valley.
This central lowland, which divides with its broad depression the mountains of Ephraim from the mountains of Galilee is the
plain of Esdraelon or Jezreel the great battle-field of Palestine. North of Carmel the lowland resumes its position by the
seaside till it is again interrupted and finally put an end to by the northern mountains, which push their way out of the
sea, ending in the white promontory of the Ras Nakhura . Above this is the ancient Phoenicia. The country thus roughly portrayed
is to all intents and purposes the whole land of israel. The northern portion is Galilee; the centre, Samaria; the south,
Judea. This is the land of Canaan which was bestowed on Abraham,—the covenanted home of his descendants. The highland district,
surrounded and intersected by its broad lowland plains, preserves from north to south a remarkably even and horizontal profile.
Its average height may betaken as 1600 to 1800 feet above the Mediterranean. It can hardly be denominated a plateau; yet so
evenly is the general level preserved and so thickly do the hills stand behind and between one another, that, when seen from
the coast or the western part of the maritime plain, it has quite the appearance of a wall. This general monotony of profile
is however, relieved at intervals by certain centers of elevation. Between these elevated points runs the watershed of the
country, sending off on either hand—to the Jordan valley on the east and the Mediterranean on the west—the long, tortuous
arms of ifs many torrent beds. The valleys on the two sides of the watershed differ considerably in character. Those on the
east are extremely steep and rugged the western valleys are more gradual in their slope.
- Fertility .—When the highlands of the country are more closely examined, a considerable difference will be found to exist
in the natural condition and appearance of their different portions. The south, as being nearer the arid desert and farther
removed from the drainage of the mountains, is drier and less productive than the north. The tract below Hebron, which forms
the link between the hills of Judah and the desert, was known to the ancient Hebrews by a term originally derived from its
dryness—Negeb . This was the south country. As the traveller advances north of this tract there is an improvement; but perhaps
no country equally cultivated is more monotonous, bare or uninviting in its aspect than a great part of the highlands of Judah
and Benjamin during the larger portion of the year. The spring covers even those bald gray rocks with verdure and color, and
fills the ravines with torrents of rushing water; but in summer and autumn the look of the country from Hebron up to Bethel
is very dreary and desolate. At Jerusalem this reaches its climax. To the west and northwest of the highlands, where the sea-breezes
are felt, there is considerably more vegetation, Hitherto we have spoken of the central and northern portions of Judea. Its
eastern portion—a tract some nine or ten miles in width by about thirty-five in length, which intervenes between the centre
and the abrupt descent to the Dead Sea—is far more wild and desolate, and that not for a portion of the year only, but throughout
it. This must have been always what it is now—an uninhabited desert, because uninhabitable. No descriptive sketch of this
part of the country can be complete which does not allude to the caverns, characteristic of all limestone districts, but here
existing in astonishing numbers. Every hill and ravine is pierced with them, some very large and of curious formation—perhaps
partly natural, partly artificial—others mere grottos. Many of them are connected with most important and interesting events
of the ancient history of the country. Especially is this true of the district now under consideration. Machpelah, Makkedah,
Adullam En-gedi, names inseparably connected with the lives, adventures and deaths of Abraham, Joshua, David and other Old-Testament
worthies, are all within the small circle of the territory of Judea. The bareness and dryness which prevail more or less in
Judea are owing partly to the absence of wood, partly to its proximity to the desert, sad partly to a scarcity of water arising
from its distance from the Lebanon. But to this discouraging aspect there are some important exceptions. The valley of Urtas,
south of Bethlehem contains springs which in abundance and excellence rival even those of Nablus the huge “Pools of Solomon”
are enough to supply a district for many miles round them; and the cultivation now going on in that Neighborhood shows whet
might be done with a soil which required only irrigation and a moderate amount of labor to evoke a boundless produce. It is
obvious that in the ancient days of the nation, when Judah and Benjamin possessed the teeming population indicated in the
Bible, the condition and aspect of the country must have been very different. Of this there are not wanting sure evidences.
There is no country in which the ruined towns bear so large a proportion to those still existing. Hardly a hill-top of the
many within sight that is not covered with vestiges of some fortress or city. But, besides this, forests appear to have stood
in many parts of Judea until the repeated invasions and sieges caused their fall; and all this vegetation must have reacted
on the moisture of the climate, and, by preserving the water in many a ravine and natural reservoir where now it is rapidly
dried by the fierce sun of the early summer, must have influenced materially the look and the resources of the country. Advancing
northward from Judea, the country (Samaria) becomes gradually more open and pleasant. Plains of good soil occur between the
hills, at first small but afterward comparatively large. The hills assume here a more varied aspect than in the southern districts,
springs are more abundant and more permanent until at last, when the district of Jebel Nablus is reached—the ancient Mount
Ephraim-the traveller encounters an atmosphere and an amount of vegetation and water which are greatly superior to anything
he has met with in Judea and even sufficient to recall much of the scenery of the West. Perhaps the springs are the only objects
which In themselves, and apart from their associations, really strike an English traveller with astonishment and admiration.
Such glorious fountains as those of Ain-jalud or the Ras el-Mukatta—where a great body of the dearest water wells silently
but swiftly out from deep blue recesses worn in the foot of a low cliff of limestone rock and at once forms a considerable
stream—are rarely to be met with out of irregular, rocky, mountainous countries, and being such unusual sights can hardly
be looked on by the traveler without surprise and emotion. The valleys which lead down from the upper level in this district
to the valley of the Jordan are less precipitous than in Judea. The eastern district of the Jebel Nablus contains some of
the most fertile end valuable spots in the holy land. Hardly less rich is the extensive region which lies northwest of the
city of Shechem (Nablus), between it and Carmel, in which the mountains gradually break down into the plain of Sharon. Put
with all its richness and all its advance on the southern part of the country there is a strange dearth of natural wood about
this central district. It is this which makes the wooded sides of Carmel and the park-like scenery of the adjacent slopes
and plains so remarkable. No sooner however, is the plain of Eadraelon passed than a considerable improvement Is perceptible.
The low hills which spread down from the mountains of Galilee, and form the barrier between the plains of Akka and Esdraelon,
are covered with timber, of moderate size it is true, but of thick, vigorous growth, and pleasant to the eye. Eastward of
these hills rises the round mass of Tabor dark with its copses of oak, and set on by contrast with the bare slopes of Jebel
ed-Duhy (the so called “Little Hermon”) and the white hills of Nazareth. A few words must be said in general description of
the maritime lowland, which intervenes between the sea and the highlands. This region, only slightly elevated above the level
of the Mediterranean, extends without interruption from el-Arish, south of Gaza, to Mount Carmel. It naturally divides itself
into two portions each of about half its length; the lower one the wider the upper one the narrower. The lower half is the
plain of the Philistines-Philistia, or, as the Hebrews called it, the Shefelah or Lowland. The upper half is the Sharon or
Saron of the Old and New Testaments. The Philistine plain is on an average 15 or 16 miles in width from the coast to the beginning
of the belt of hills which forms the gradual approach to the high land of the mountains of Judah. The larger towns, as Gaza
and Ashdod, which stand near the shore, are surrounded with huge groves of olive, sycamore and, as in the days King David.
(1 Chronicles 27:28) The whole plain appears to consist of brown loamy soil, light but rich and almost without a stone. It is now, as it was
when the Philistines possessed it, one enormous cornfield; an ocean of wheat covers the wide expense between the hills and
the sand dunes of the seashore, without interruption of any kind—no break or hedge, hardly even a single olive tree. Its fertility
is marvellous; for the prodigious crops which if raises are produced, and probably have been produced almost year by year
for the last forty centuries, without any of the appliances which we find necessary for success. The plain of Sharon is much
narrower then Philistia. It is about 10 miles wide from the sea to the foot of the mountains, which are here of a more abrupt
character than those of Philistia, and without the intermediate hilly region there occurring. The one ancient port of the
Jews, the “beautiful”, city of Joppa, occupied a position central between the Shefelah and Sharon. Roads led from these various
cities to each other to Jerusalem, Neapolis and Sebaste in the interior, and to Ptolemais and Gaza on the north and south.
The commerce of Damascus, and beyond Damascus, of Persia and India, passed this way to Egypt, Rome and the infant colonies
of the West; and that traffic and the constant movement of troops backward and forward must have made this plain, at the time
of Christ, one of the busiest and most populous regions of Syria.
- The Jordan valley .—The chacteristics already described are hardly peculiar to Palestine, but there is one feature, as yet
only alluded to, in which she stands alone. This feature is the Jordan—the one river of the country. The river is elsewhere
described; [Jordan] but it and the valley through which it rushes down its extraordinary descent must be here briefly characterized. This valley
begins with the river at its remotest springs of Hasbeiya, on the northwest side of Hermon, and accompanies it to the lower
end of the Dead Sea, a length of about 1,50 miles. During the whole of this distance its course is straight and its direction
nearly due north and south. The springs of Hasbeiya are 1700 feet above the level of the Mediterranean and the northern end
of the Dead Sea is 1317 feet below it, so that between these two points the valley falls with more or less regularity through
a height of more than 3000 feet. But though the river disappears at this point, the valley still continues its descent below
the waters of the Dead Sea till it reaches a further depth of 1308 feet. So that the bottom of this extraordinary crevasse
is actually more than 2600 feet below the surface of the ocean. In width the valley varies. In its upper and shallower portion,
as between Banias and the lake of Merom (Huleh), it is about five miles across. Between the lake of Merom and the Sea or Galilee
it contracts, and becomes more of an ordinary ravine or glen. It is in its third and lower portion that the valley assumes
its more definite and regular character. During the greater part of this portion it is about seven miles wide from the one
wall to the other. The eastern mountains preserve their straight line of direction, and their massive horizontal wall-like
aspect, during almost the whole distance. The western mountains are more irregular in height, their slopes less vertical.
North of Jericho they recede in a kind of wide amphitheatre, and the valley becomes twelve miles broad—a breadth which it
thenceforward retains to the southern extremity of the Dead Sea. Buried as it is between such lofty ranges, and shielded from
every breeze, the climate of the Jordan valley is extremely hot and relaxing. Its enervating influence is shown by the inhabitants
of Jericho. All the irrigation necessary for the cultivation which formerly existed is obtained front the torrents of the
western mountains. For all purposes to which a river ordinarily applied the Jordan is useless. The Dead Sea, which is the
final receptacle of the Jordan, is described elsewhere. [Sea, The Salt, THE SALT.)
- Climate .—“Probably there is no country in the world of the same extent which has a greater variety of climate than Palestine.
On Mount Hermon, at its northern border there is perpetual snow. From this we descend successively by the peaks of Bashan
and upper Galilee, where the oak and pine flourish, to the hills of Judah and Samaria, where the vine and fig tree are at
home, to the plains of the seaboard where the palm and banana produce their fruit down to the sultry shores of the Sea, on
which we find tropical heat and tropical vegetation.” McClintock and Strong . As in the time of our Saviour (Luke 12:64) the rains come chiefly from the south or southwest. They commence at the end of October or beginning of November and continue
with greater or less constancy till the end of February or March. It is not a heavy, continuous rain so much as a succession
of severe showers or storms, with intervening periods of fine, bright weather. Between April and November there is, with the
rarest exceptions, an uninterrupted succession of fine weather and skies without a cloud. Thus the year divides itself into
two and only two seasons—as indeed we see it constantly divided in the Bible-” winter and summer” “cold and heat,” “seed-time
and harvest.”
- Botany .—The botany of Syria and Palestine differs but little from that of Asia Minor, which is one of the most rich and varied
on the globe. Among trees the oak is by far the most prevalent. The trees of the genus Pistacia rank next to the oak in abundance,
and of these there are three species in Syria. There is also the carob or locust tree (Ceratonia siliqua), the pine, sycamore,
poplar and walnut. Of planted trees large shrubs the first in importance is the vine, which is most abundantly cultivated
all over the country, and produces, as in the time of the Canaanites, enormous bunches of grapes. This is especially the case
in the southern districts, those of Eshcol being still particularly famous. Next to the vine, or even in some respects its
superior in importance, ranks the olive, which nowhere grows in greater luxuriance and abundance than in Palestine, where
the olive orchards form a prominent feature throughout the landscape, and have done so from time immemorial. The fig forms
another most important crop in Syria and Palestine. (Besides these are the almond, pomegranate, orange, pear, banana, quince
and mulberry among fruit trees. Of vegetables there are many varieties, as the egg plant, pumpkin, asparagus, lettuce, melon
and cucumber. Palestine is especially distinguished for its wild flowers, of which there are more than five hundred varieties.
The geranium, pink, poppy, narcissus, honeysuckle, oleander, jessamine, tulip and iris are abundant. The various grains are
also very largely cultivated.—ED.)
- Zoology.—It will be sufficient in this article to give a general survey of the fauna of Palestine, as the reader will find
more particular information in the several articles which treat of the various animals under their respective names. Jackals
and foxes are common; the hyena and wolf are also occasionally observed; the lion is no longer a resident in Palestine or
Syria. A species of squirrel the which the term orkidaun “the leaper,” has been noticed on the lower and middle parts of Lebanon.
Two kinds of hare, rats and mice, which are said to abound, the jerboa, the porcupine, the short-tailed field-mouse, may be
considered as the representatives of the Rodentia . Of the Pachydermata the wild boar, which is frequently met with on Taber
and Little Hermon, appears to be the only living wild example. There does not appear to be at present any wild ox in Palestine.
Of domestic animals we need only mention the Arabian or one-humped camel, the ass, the mule and the horse, all of which are
in general use. The buffalo (Bubalus buffalo) is common. The ox of the country is small and unsightly in the neighborhood
of Jerusalem, but in the richer pastures the cattle, though small, are not unsightly The common sheep of Palestine is the
broadtail, with its varieties. Goats are extremely common everywhere. Palestine abounds in numerous kinds of birds. Vultures,
eagles, falcons, kites, owls of different kinds represent the Raptorial order. In the south of Palestine especially, reptiles
of various kinds abound. It has been remarked that in its physical character Palestine presents on a small scale an epitome
of the natural features of all regions, mountainous and desert, northern and tropical, maritime and inland, pastoral, arable
and volcanic.
- Antiquities .—In the preceding description allusion has been made to many of the characteristic features of the holy land;
but it is impossible to close this account without mentioning a defect which is even more characteristic—its luck of monuments
and personal relies of the nation which possessed it for so many centuries and gave it its claim to our veneration and affection.
When compared with other nations of equal antiquity—Egypt, Greece Assyria—the contrast is truly remarkable. In Egypt and Greece,
and also in Assyria, as far as our knowledge at present extends, we find a series of buildings reaching down from the most
remote and mysterious antiquity, a chain of which hardly a link is wanting, and which records the progress of the people in
civilization art and religion as certainly as the buildings of the medieval architects do that of the various nations of modern
Europe. But in Palestine it is not too much to say that there does not exist a single edifice or part of an edifice of which
we call be sure that it is of a date anterior to the Christian era. And as with the buildings, so with other memorials, With
one exception, the museums of Europe do not possess a single piece of pottery or metal work, a single weapon or household
utensil, an ornament or a piece of armor of Israelite make, which can give us the least conception of the manners or outward
appliances of the nation before the date of the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus. The coins form the single exception. M.
Renan has named two circumstances which must have had a great effect in suppressing art or architecture amongst the ancient
Israelites, while their very existence proves that the people had no genius in that direction. These are (1) the prohibition
of sculptured representations of living creatures, and (2) the command not to build a temple anywhere but at Jerusalem.