The stage on which Hebrew history takes place is a
varied and a troubled place. Hebrew history, as told by the Hebrews, begins
in Mesopotamia, in the cities of Ur in the south and Haran in the north.
Mesopotamia was a rich agricultural area, fed by irrigation from the two
rivers which give it its name: the Tigris and the Euphrates. Powerful
city-states, such as Ur, rose up in this fertile area, and these
city-states would eventually become the foundation of mighty empires, such
as the Akkadian and Amorite empires.
The Hebrews become a nation in another foreign land,
Egypt. Rich with the water and soil carried by the Nile river, Egypt grew
quickly into a great commercial and military power; the Egyptians created
the longest continual culture outside of Asia. Punctuated by periods
of decline and even foreign rule, the Egyptians had learned by the New
Kingdom to ruthlessly control and subdue the foreign peoples surrounding
their country. The Hebrews come into existence during this last powerful
burst of power and creativity in Egypt.
Between this period, that is, the origins in
Mesopotamia and the creation of the new nation in Egypt, Hebrew history
centered around Palestine. This area was the special area of Hebrew
history, for it was this area that the Hebrew god promised to his chosen
people. In the Hebrew world view, this was their land given to them
by the one and only one god, and it was to this land that the Hebrews would
migrate to out of Egypt. On this land the various tribes would fight
difficult and often losing battles of occupation, set up a kingdom, and
then the briefest of empires.
What was this land? Its most salient geographical fact
was that it lay between Mesopotamia and Egypt. It was the land bridge that
carried all the commercial goods between these two wealthy and powerful
areas; it was also the highway on which armies would travel, whether
Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Greek, or Roman. More than anything else, this fact
of geography determined the course of Hebrew history. Like a moon caught
between the massive gravitational forces of two large planets, Palestine
was in constant turmoil and under constant threat.
Although the Hebrews called it the "land of milk
and honey," Palestine (named after the group that dominated it for
much of its early history, the Philistines) was in fact a harsh
environment. It appeared to be the land of milk and honey only to a group
of people that had been, after all, living in the desert for several
generations. The land itself is composed of four geographically
self-contained longitudinal strips; the self-containment of these areas
always made it difficult throughout history to create a unified state out
of the entire area. The richest agricultural areas are along the
Mediterranean coast, but this area was dominated fist by Canaanites and
then Philistines for a large part of Hebrew history.
The Hebrews controlled this area for only a very brief
time during the monarchy. Because they could not dislodge these people, the
Hebrews settled in the second area, the central hill country, a
backbone of mountains running from north to south between the coastal areas
and the Jordan River valley. Dry and rocky, the central hills are a very
difficult place to live, but the spectacle of Hebrew history mainly takes
place in this hill country: Galilee, Samaria, Megiddo, Shechem, Judah, Jerusalem, Hebron,
Beer-sheba. To the west of the hills is the Jordan River valley. In Hebrew,
the word Jordan means "the descender," for it begins at Mount
Hermon in the north at about 200 feet above sea level, and literally
plummets to the Sea (actually a lake) of Galilee ten miles south at 700
feet below sea level, and from there another two hundred miles to
the Dead or Salt Sea at 1300 feet below sea level (the lowest piece of land
on earth and a mightily inhospitable place to live). Along this valley and
around the Sea of Galilee are rich farmlands yielding grains and fruit as
well as wealthy fishing in the river and the Sea of Galilee. To the west of
the Jordan River valley are the Transjordan Highlands (about 1500 feet
above sea level). The climate can be harsh, but several rivers allow for
rich agriculture. This area was largely occupied by non-Hebrews; in the
Transjordan Highlands were the kingdoms of Edom (south), Moab (center), and
Ammon (center). For most of its history, these lands were out of Hebrew
control.