Galilean

Mosaic from the 'Nile House' of Sepphoris, c. 2nd century CE.

Generically, a Galilean (/ɡælɪˈlən/; Hebrew: גלילי; Ancient Greek: Γαλιλαίων; Latin: Galilaeos) is a term that was used in classical sources to describe the inhabitants of Galilee, an area of northern Israel and southern Lebanon that extends from the northern coastal plain in the west to the Sea of Galilee and the Jordan Rift Valley to the east.

Later the term was used to refer to the early Christians by Roman emperors Julian and Marcus Aurelius, among others.

Markus Cromhout describes 1st century Galileans as descendants of Hasmonean-era Judean immigrants. However, they identified as numerous identities, including Galilean, Sepphorean and more broadly, Judean or Israelite. Whilst they all adhered to a 'common Judaism', Galileans 'had a different social, economic and political matrix than Jews living in Judea or the Diaspora'.[1] Other scholars disagree and attribute the conflation between Galileans and Judeans to Hellenistic-Roman culture, which grouped all 1st century Palestinian Jewish groups, and their related diasporas, as "Judean".[2]

History

Biblical narrative

According to the Biblical narrative in the Book of Joshua, the Galilee was allotted to the tribes of Naphtali and Dan, at points overlapping with the domain of the Tribe of Asher and neighboring the region of Issachar.[3] The First Book of Kings claims that the Phoenician ruler King Hiram I of Sidon was awarded twenty cities in the region of Galilee, given to him by Solomon, and the land was subsequently settled by foreigners during or after the time of Hiram.[4] As part of the Northern Kingdom, Galilee and all the land of Naphtali were dispersed and resettled through the influx of foreigners due to the resettlement policy of the Neo-Assyrian Empire during the 8th century BC (2 Kings 15:29).[5] The Book of Isaiah refers to the region as g'lil ha-goyím (Hebrew: גְּלִיל הַגּוֹיִם), meaning 'Galilee of the Nations' or 'Galilee of the Gentiles' (Isaiah 9:1).

Though Biblical scholarship and historical criticism has doubted the historicity of the twelve tribes themselves since the 19th century,[6][7] the Neo-Assyrian large-scale deportation and resettlement of their conquered lands was widespread during the late 8th century BCE and remained a policy for the following several centuries.[8]

Classical antiquity

After some early expeditions to Galilee to save the Jews there from attack, the Hasmonean rulers conquered Galilee and added it to their kingdom.[citation needed] Following the Hasmonean conquest, and again after the Roman conquest, an influx of Jews settled in the Galilee, thus doubling its population and changing it from a sparsely inhabited pagan territory to one that is primarily Judaic.[9]

Archaeological evidence, such as ritual baths, stone vessels (which were required by Judaic dietary purity laws), secondary burials, the absence of pig bones, and the use of ossuaries found at Parod, Huqoq, and Hittin, demonstrates a religious similarity between the Galileans Jews and Judaean Jews during the end of the Second Temple period.[9] The material culture of the 1st century Galilee indicates adherence to the Judaic ritual purity concerns. Stone vessels are ubiquitous and mikvehs have been uncovered in most Galilean sites, particularly around synagogues and private houses.[10]

The Galileans Jews were conscious of a mutual descent, religion and ethnicity that they shared with Judaean Jews. Few evidence exists to suggest that the people thought of themselves merely as Galileans rather than Jews, and Josephus, the only contemporary author known to have been well acquainted with the area, does not mention anything unique about the Judaism practiced there in his detailed narrative set in Galilee.[11] However, there were numerous cultural differences,[12] and later rabbinic literature affirm traditions that Judaic religious life in Galilee was distinct in some aspects from that in Judaea.[11] John Elliott argues that only outsiders, like Romans and Samaritans, confused the Galileans with Judeans.[2]

The Pharisaic scholars of Judaism, centered in Jerusalem and Judaea, found the Galileans to be insufficiently concerned about the details of Judaic observance – for example, the rules of Sabbath rest. The Pharisaic criticism of Galileans is mirrored in the New Testament, in which Galilean religious passion is compared favorably against the minute concerns of Judaean legal scholars, see for example Woes of the Pharisees. This was the heart of a "crosstown" rivalry existing between Galileans and Judaic Pharisees.

Rabbi Yohanan ben Zakkai was born in Arav, Galilee, but upon adulthood moved south into Jerusalem, as he found the Galilean attitude objectionable, decrying them for hating the Torah.[13][14] According to the Mishnah, Yohanan was the first to be given the title of rabbi.[15] The Talmud says that Yohanan was assigned to a post in the Galilee during his training. In eighteen years he was asked only two questions of Judaic walk of life, causing him to lament "O Galilee, O Galilee, in the end you shall be filled with wrongdoers!"[16] In his analysis of the biblical narrative of Jesus's crucifixion, Markus Cromhout proposes that the Romans intentionally offended the Judeans by crucifying Jesus as 'the King of Judeans', despite being Galiean.[1]

Settlement in the area underwent a dramatic change between roughly the beginning of the first century BCE and the first half of the first century CE: many settlements were established; uninhabited or sparsely populated areas, like the eastern part of the region or hilly areas with limited agricultural potential, experienced a wave of settlement; and the size of the settled area doubled.[9]

Bar Kokhba revolt

According to Yehoshafat Harkabi, the Galileans were not fazed by the Bar Kokhba revolt because Galilee as a whole either never joined the revolt or, if there was any insurgence, it was quickly ended.[17] University of Haifa professor Menachem Mor states that the Galileans had little (if any) participation in the revolt, with the rebellion chiefly rising in the southern regions of Judaea.[18]

Medieval and Modern periods

Records thought the centuries attest to Galilean presence in villages such as Kafr Yassif, Biriyya, and Alma, but no Jewish continuity in those was found in 19th and 20th century Palestine at the latest. The remaining centuries Galilean Jews had either underwent Arabization and sometimes Islamization, or joined the diaspora by the Ottoman period in Palestine. A few managed to stay on the land while maintaining Jewish identity, as seen in the village of Peki'in in Mandatory Palestine, whose presence is speculated to potentially go back to the Second Temple Period, suggesting its Jews had never left.

Dialect

The New Testament notes that the Apostle Peter's accent gave him away as a Galilean (Matthew 26:73 and Mark 14:70). The Galilean dialect referred to in the New Testament was a form of Jewish Palestinian Aramaic spoken by people in Galilee from the late Second Temple period (1st century BCE to 1st century CE) through a time period referred to as the Yavne period in Jewish history and the Apostolic Age in Christian history (2nd century CE).

Other meanings

"Galileans" was used to refer to members of a fanatical sect (Zealots), followers of Judas of Galilee, who fiercely resented the taxation of the Romans.[19]

"Galileans" was also term used by some in the Roman Empire to name the followers of Christianity, called in this context as the Galilaean faith. Emperor Julian used the term in his polemic Against the Galileans, where he accuses the Galileans as being lazy, atheistic, superstitious, and their practices derivative of the Greeks.[20] Henrik Ibsen used the term in his play following Julians's goal of reestablishing the Roman religion and the tension between him and his own dynasty, who fictively claim Galilæan descent and relation to Jesus of Nazareth.[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Cromhout, Markus (2008). "Were the Galileans "religious Jews" or "ethnic Judeans?"". HTS Theological Studies. 64 (3) – via Scielo.
  2. ^ a b Elliott, John (2007). "Jesus the Israelite Was Neither a `Jew' Nor a `Christian': On Correcting Misleading Nomenclature". Journal for the Study of the Historical Jesus. 5 (2): 119–154 – via Academia.
  3. ^ "Map of the Twelve Tribes of Israel | Jewish Virtual Library". jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2015-05-18.
  4. ^ History of Phoenicia, by George Rawlinson 1889, "Phoenicia under the hegemony of Tyre (B.C. 1252–877)"
  5. ^ Gottheil, Richard; Ryssel, Victor; Jastrow, Marcus; Levias, Caspar (1906). "Captivity, or Exile, Babylonian". Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 3. New York: Funk & Wagnalls Co.
  6. ^ "In any case, it is now widely agreed that the so-called 'patriarchal/ancestral period' is a later 'literary' construct, not a period in the actual history of the ancient world. The same is the case for the ‘exodus’ and the 'wilderness period,' and more and more widely for the 'period of the Judges.'" Paula M. McNutt (1 January 1999). Reconstructing the Society of Ancient Israel. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-664-22265-9.
  7. ^ "Did Israel Always Have Twelve Tribes?". www.thetorah.com.
  8. ^ Radner, Karen (2012). "Mass deportation: the Assyrian resettlement policy". Assyrian empire builders. University College London.
  9. ^ a b c Leibner, Uzi (2009). Settlement and History in Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine Galilee: An Archaeological Survey of the Eastern Galilee. Mohr Siebeck. pp. 333–337. ISBN 978-3-16-151460-9.
  10. ^ Archaeology and the Galilean Jesus: A Re-examination of the Evidence, A&C Black, 1 May 2002, By Jonathan L. Reed, page 56
  11. ^ a b Goodman, Martin (1999), Sturdy, John; Davies, W. D.; Horbury, William (eds.), "Galilean Judaism and Judaean Judaism", The Cambridge History of Judaism: Volume 3: The Early Roman Period, The Cambridge History of Judaism, vol. 3, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 596–617, ISBN 978-0-521-24377-3, retrieved 2023-03-20
  12. ^ Archaeology and the Galilean Jesus: A Re-examination of the Evidence, A&C Black, 1 May 2002, By Jonathan L. Reed, page 55
  13. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia, Yochanan ben Zakai
  14. ^ Jerusalem Talmud, Shabbat 16:8 (81b)
  15. ^ Hezser, Catherine (1997). The Social Structure of the Rabbinic Movement in Roman Palestine. Mohr Siebeck. pp. 64–. ISBN 978-3-16-146797-4. We suggest that the avoidance of the title "Rabbi" for pre-70 sages may have originated with the editors of the Mishnah. The editors attributed the title to some sages and not to others. The avoidance of the title for pre-70 sages may perhaps be seen as a deliberate program on the part of these editors who wanted to create the impression that the "rabbinic movement" began with R. Yochanan b. Zakkai and that the Yavnean "academy" was something new, a notion that is sometimes already implicitly or explicitly suggested by some of the traditions available to them. This notion is not diminished by the occasional claim to continuity with the past which was limited to individual teachers and institutions and served to legitimize rabbinic authority.
  16. ^ Jerusalem Talmud Shabbat 16:7, 15d
  17. ^ Yehoshafat Harkabi (1983). The Bar Kokhba Syndrome: Risk and Realism in International Politics. SP Books. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-0-940646-01-8.
  18. ^ Mor, Menahem (4 May 2016). The Second Jewish Revolt: The Bar Kokhba War, 132-136 CE. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-31463-4.
  19. ^  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWood, James, ed. (1907). "Galilæans". The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne.
  20. ^ Introduction to the translation of Julians text "Against the Galilæans", mentioning elder usage of the term. Transl. C.W. King, 1888.
  21. ^ "Emperor and Galilean (Translation by William Archer)". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-08-15.