Ancient Jewish History:
The Twelve Tribes of Israel
The Tribes of Israel
are the traditional divisions of the ancient Jewish people. Biblical
tradition holds that the twleve tribes of Israel are descended from the
sons and grandsons of the Jewish forefather Jacob and are called "Israel" from Jacob's name given to him by God.
The twelve tribes are as follows: Reuben, Simeon, Judah, Issachar, Zebulun, Benjamin, Dan, Naphtali, Gad, Asher, Ephraim and Manasseh.
The story of the twelve tribes begins when Jacob and his family went down to Egypt
as "70 souls" In Egypt "the Israelites were fertile and prolific; they
multiplied and increased very greatly," and there they became the
"Israelite
people." Following the death of Joseph - one of Jacob's sons who had become viceroy of Egypt - Pharoah oppressed the Israelites by placing upon them burdensome labor.
Map of the Twelve Tribes
Click on any tribe for more information |
God "remembered His covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob," made Himself known to Moses
and rescued the Israelites from Egypt. By this time the nation numbered
"600,000 men on foot" which is usually understood to be military-aged
men excluding women and children.
At Mount Sinai, the Israelite nation is given its laws and regulations - the Torah - and affirms their covenant with God. After wandering for 40 years in the desert under the leadership of Moses, the twelve tribes enter the land of Canaan with Joshua in command.
After conquering the
land, each tribe was allotted an individual territory to settle. During
this period of settlement, and the subsequent period of the Judges,
there was no predetermined pattern of leadership among the tribes
though various crises forced the tribes into cooperative action against
enemies.
Shiloh
served as a sacral center for all the tribes, housing the Ark of the Covenant under the priestly family of Eli. Under the impact of military pressures, the Israelites felt compelled to turn to
Samuel
with the request that he establish a monarchy, and
Saul
was crowned to rule over all the tribes of Israel.
Upon his death, Saul's son was accepted by all the tribes as the new king, save Judah and Simeon who preferred David.
David's struggle with the house of Saul ended in victory for him and
all the elders turned to David for royal leadership. He ruled from Hebron and later Jerusalem over all the tribes of Israel and following his death was succeeded by his son, Solomon. After the death of
Solomon, the tribes once again split along territorial and political lines, with Judah and Benjamin in the south loyal to the Davidic house and the rest of the tribes in the north ruled by a succession of dynasties.
Modern scholarship
does not generally accept the biblical notion that the twelve tribes are
simply divisions of a larger unit which developed naturally from
patriarchal roots. This simplistic scheme, it is felt, actually stems
from later genealogical speculations which attempted to explain the
history of the tribes in terms of familial relationships. The alliance
of the twelve tribes is believed to have grown from the organization of
independent tribes, or groups of tribes, forced together for historical
reasons. Scholars differ as to when this union of twelve took place and
when the tribes of Israel became one nation.
One school of thought
holds that the confederation took place inside the country toward the
end of the period of the Judges and the beginnings of the Monarchy. All
of the traditions which see the twelve tribes as one nation as early as
the enslavement in Egypt
or the wanderings in the desert are regarded as having no basis in
fact. This school recognizes in the names of some of the tribes the
names of ancient sites in Canaan, such as the mountains of Naphtali, Ephraim, and Judah, the desert of Judah, and Gilead. With the passage of time, those who dwelt in these areas assumed the names of the localities.
Others feel that the tribes descended from the matriarch Leah - namely Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Zebulun and Issachar
- existed at an earlier stage as a confederation of six tribes whose
boundaries in Canaan were contiguous. Only at a later stage did other
tribes penetrate the area, eventually expanding the confederation to
twelve.
A second school
grants that the union of twelve existed during the period of wanderings
in the desert, but that Canaan was not conquered by an alliance of these
at any one time. Rather, there were individual incursions into the land
at widely separated periods. However, the covenant among the twelve
tribes and their awareness of national unity flowing from ethnic kinship
and common history, faith, and sacral practices had their source in the
period prior to the conquest of the land.
The number twelve is
neither fictitious nor the result of an actual genealogical development
in patriarchal history. It is an institutionalized and conventionalized
figure which is found among other tribes as well, such as the sons of Ishmael, of Nahor, of Joktan, and Esau. Similar organizational patterns built about groups of twelve, or even six, tribes, are known from Asia Minor, Greece and Italy. In Greece,
such groupings were called amphictyony, meaning "to dwell about" a
central sanctuary. Each tribe was assigned a prearranged turn in the
provision and maintenance of the shrine. The amphictyonic members would
make pilgrimages to the common religious center on festive occasions.
The exact measure of correspondence between the amphictyony of the
Hellenic world and the duodecimal structure of the tribes of Israel may
be the subject of scholarly controversy, but there can be little doubt
that this pattern of twelve attributed to the Hebrew tribes is very real
and historically rooted. Thus, if one tribe were to withdraw from the
union or to be absorbed into another, the number twelve would be
preserved, either by splitting one of the remaining tribes into two or
by accepting a new tribe into the union. For example, when the tribe of Levi is considered among the twelve tribes, the Joseph tribes are counted as one. However, when Levi is not mentioned, the Joseph tribes are counted separately as Manasseh and Ephraim. For the same duodecimal considerations, Simeon is counted as a tribe even after having been absorbed into Judah, and Manasseh even after having split in tw, is considered one.
The confederation of
the twelve tribes was primarily religious, based upon belief in the one
"God of Israel" with whom the tribes had made a covenant and whom they
worshiped at a common sacral center as the "people of the Lord." The
Tent of Meeting and the Ark of the Covenant
were the most sacred objects of the tribal union and biblical tradition
shows that many places served as religious centers in various periods.
During the desert wanderings, "the mountain of God," that is, Sinai or
Horeb, served as such a place, as did the great oasis at Kadesh-Barnea
where the tribes remained for some time and from where the tribes
attempted a conquest of the land. Many sites in Canaan are mentioned as
having sacred associations or as being centers of pilgrimage. Some of
these, such as Penuel, where Jacob received the name Israel, Beth-El, where the Ark rested, and Beer-Sheba, go back to patriarchal times. Jacob built an altar at Shechem and the tribes gathered there "before the Lord" and made a covenant with Him in Joshua's time. Shiloh enjoyed special importance as a central site for the tribes. There they gathered under Joshua to divide up the land by lot, and it was there that they placed the Tent of Meeting and the Ark of the Covenant. Eli's family, which traced its descent from Aaron, the high priest, served at Shiloh, and it was to Shiloh that the Israelites turned for festivals and sacrifices.
The multiplicity of
cultic places raises the question of whether all twelve tribes were
actually centered about one amphictyonic site. It may be that as a
tribe's connections with the amphictyony were weakened for various
reasons, the tribe began to worship at one or another of the sites.
Possibly, different sites served the several subgroups among the tribes.
Beer-Sheba and Hebron, for example, served the southern groups of tribes; Shechem, Shiloh, and Gilgal
were revered by the tribes in the center of the country; and the shrine
at Dan served the northern tribes. The likelihood of a multiplicity of
shrines is strengthened by the fact that clusters of Canaanite
settlements separated the southern and central tribes and divided the
central tribes from those in Galilee.
It is possible that various shrines served different tribes
simultaneously, while the sanctuary which held the Ark of the Lord was
revered as central to all twelve.
The changes which
occurred in the structure of the twelve tribes and in their relative
strengths, find expression in the biblical genealogies. The tribes are
descended from four matriarchs, eight of them from the wives Leah and Rachel, and four from the handmaids Bilhah and Zilpah.
It is a widely held view that attribution to the two wives is
indicative of an early stage of tribal organization, the "tribes of
Leah" and the "tribes of Rachel." The attribution of four tribes to
handmaids may indicate either a lowered status or late entry into the
confederation. In the list of the twelve tribes, Reuben is prominent as the firstborn, followed by Simeon, Levi, and Judah, the sons of Leah, who occupy primary positions.
Reuben
stood at the head of a tribal league and had a position of central
importance among his confederates prior to the conquest of the land. On
the other hand, the same tribe is inactive during the period of the
Judges - it did not provide any of the judges and during Deborah's war against Sisera, Reuben
"sat among the sheepfolds" and did not render any aid. Possibly,
because this tribe dwelt on the fringes of the land, its links with the
others were weakened and its continued existence as one of the tribes of
Israel was in jeopardy.
Simeon was absorbed by Judah. Levi spread throughout Israel as a result of its sacral duties. Judah
was cut off from the rest of the tribes by a Canaanite land strip that
separated the mountains of Judah and Ephraim. Reuben's place as head of
the twelve tribes was taken by the house of Joseph which played a
decisive and historic role during the periods of the settlement and the
Judges. Joshua came from the tribe of Ephraim.
Shechem and Shiloh were within the borders of the house of Joseph.
Samuel came from the hill country of Ephraim. Ephraim led the tribes in
the war against Benjamin over the incident of the concubine in Gibeah.
At the beginning of the Monarchy, the leadership passed to Judah . The
passage in I Chronicles 5:1–2 illustrates well how the
dominant position among the tribes passed from Reuben to Ephraim and
from Ephraim to Judah.
Each of the twelve
tribes enjoyed a good deal of autonomy, ordering its own affairs after
the patriarchal-tribal pattern. No doubt there were administrative
institutions common to all the tribes, situated beside the central
shrines, though information about them is exceedingly scanty. During the
desert wanderings, leadership of the people was vested in the princes
of each of the tribes and the elders who assisted Moses.
They met and legislated for the entire people. There are references to
meetings of tribal leaders and elders during the periods of the
settlement and the Judges. "The princes of the congregation, the heads
of the thousands of Israel" along with Phinehas the priest, conducted
negotiations with the Transjordanian tribes, in the name of the entire
nation. Joshua summoned "the elders, the heads, the judges, and the
officers of Israel" to make a covenant in Shechem. The elders of Israel,
speaking for the entire nation, requested Samuel to appoint a king. The
incidents of the concubine in Gibeah and Saul's battle with Nahash the
Ammonite are classic examples of joint action taken by the league of
twelve tribes acting "as one man, from Dan even to Beer-Sheba, with the
land of Gilead". In the one case, unified action was taken by the tribes
against one of their members, Benjamin, for a breach of the terms of
the covenant. The war against Nahash the Ammonite proves that the tribes
were required to come to the aid of any one of the league that found
itself in difficulty. Because of the sacral nature of the league, the
wars of the tribes were considered "wars of the Lord". Nevertheless, the
narratives in the Book of Judges regarding the battles which Israel
waged against its enemies make it clear that the league must have been
rather weak in those days.
The consciousness of
national and religious unity had not yet led to a solid
politico-military confederation. The Song of Deborah gives clear
expression to the lack of solidarity among the
tribes, for some of them did not come to
the aid of the Galilean tribes. It is impossible to designate even one
war against external enemies during the period of the Judges in which
all the tribes acted in concert. Indeed, there are indications of
intertribal quarrels and disputes. In this connection, there are
scholars who hold that the judge-deliverers were not pantribal national
leaders, but headed only individual tribes, or groups of them. It was
only toward the end of the period of the Judges when the Philistine
pressure on the Israelite tribes increased in the west and that of the
Transjordanian peoples in the east, that the religionational tribal
confederation assumed political and military dimensions. The Israelite
tribes then consolidated as a crystallized national-territorial entity
within the framework of a monarchical regime. David, Solomon, and
afterward the kings of Israel and Judah tended to weaken tribal
consciousness in favor of the territorial and monarchical organization.
It is apparent, however, from Ezekiel's eschatological vision that the
awareness of Israel as a people composed of twelve tribes had not, even
then, become effaced.
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