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Israelite highland settlement refers to an ancient Israelite settlement in the highlands north of Jerusalem discovered in archaeological field surveys conducted in Israel since the 1970s. These surveys found a large increase in the settled population dating to 1200 BCE. It is not known whether the Israelites arrived in the wake of conquests or the new villages were established by former nomads or displaced persons. A similar increase was not found in the surrounding lowland areas. According to archaeological evidence, these areas may have been inhabited by Canaanites or Sea People.

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  • Peuplement des hautes terres par les Israélites (fr)
  • Israelite highland settlement (en)
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  • Le peuplement des hautes terres par les Israélites est un phénomène identifié par l'archéologie dans les hautes terres situés à l'ouest du Jourdain pour l'âge du fer I (c. 1200 à 1000 av. J.-C.), qui voit l'apparition de sites sédentaires dans cette région, occupés par une population généralement identifiée comme les ancêtres des Israélites (parfois désignés comme des « proto-Israélites »). Ce phénomène est l'objet d'un débat quant à l'interprétation de l'origine de ces populations et des raisons qui les ont poussées à se sédentariser durant cette période, qui est marquée par de grands bouleversements dans tout le Proche-Orient. (fr)
  • Israelite highland settlement refers to an ancient Israelite settlement in the highlands north of Jerusalem discovered in archaeological field surveys conducted in Israel since the 1970s. These surveys found a large increase in the settled population dating to 1200 BCE. It is not known whether the Israelites arrived in the wake of conquests or the new villages were established by former nomads or displaced persons. A similar increase was not found in the surrounding lowland areas. According to archaeological evidence, these areas may have been inhabited by Canaanites or Sea People. (en)
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  • Israelite highland settlement refers to an ancient Israelite settlement in the highlands north of Jerusalem discovered in archaeological field surveys conducted in Israel since the 1970s. These surveys found a large increase in the settled population dating to 1200 BCE. It is not known whether the Israelites arrived in the wake of conquests or the new villages were established by former nomads or displaced persons. A similar increase was not found in the surrounding lowland areas. According to archaeological evidence, these areas may have been inhabited by Canaanites or Sea People. A 2005 book by Robert D. Miller applies statistical modeling to the sizes and locations of the villages, grouping them by economic and political features. He found highland groupings centered on Dothan, Tirzah, Shechem, and Shiloh. The tribal territory of Benjamin was not organized around any main town. This evidence does not prove there was a conquest as described in the Book of Joshua, but if the biblical reference to "daughter villages" means all villages closest to a specific town, the list of Canaanite towns not taken in the Book of Judges (Judges 1:27-35), which begins: "Nor did Manesseh drive out Bet Shean and her daughter-villages ...", the correspondence to the survey results is remarkably accurate. Towns not captured in the central zone were Taanach, Ibleam, Megiddo, Dor, Gezer, Aijalon, Shaalbim, and Jerusalem. (en)
  • Le peuplement des hautes terres par les Israélites est un phénomène identifié par l'archéologie dans les hautes terres situés à l'ouest du Jourdain pour l'âge du fer I (c. 1200 à 1000 av. J.-C.), qui voit l'apparition de sites sédentaires dans cette région, occupés par une population généralement identifiée comme les ancêtres des Israélites (parfois désignés comme des « proto-Israélites »). Ce phénomène est l'objet d'un débat quant à l'interprétation de l'origine de ces populations et des raisons qui les ont poussées à se sédentariser durant cette période, qui est marquée par de grands bouleversements dans tout le Proche-Orient. (fr)
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