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AMORITES

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Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 876 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AMORITES  , the name given by the Israelites to the earlier inhabitants of

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Palestine . They are regarded as a powerful
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people, giants in stature " like the height of the cedars," who had occupied the
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land east and west of the Jordan . The Biblical usage appears to show that the terms " Canaanites " and " Amorites " were used synonymously, the former being characteristic of Judaean, the latter of Ephraimite and Deuteronomic writers . A distinction is sometimes maintained, however, when the Amorites are spoken of as the people of the past, whereas the Canaanites are referred to as still surviving . The old name is an ethnic
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term, evidently to be connected with the terms Amurru and Amar, used by
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Assyria and
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Egypt respectively . In the spelling Mar-tu, the name is as old as the first Babylonian dynasty, but from the 15th century B.C. and downwards its syllabic
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equivalent Amurru is applied primarily to the land extending northwards of Palestine as far as Kadesh on the
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Orontes . The term " Canaan," on the other hand, is confined more especially to the
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southern
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district (from Gebal to the south of Palestine) . But it is possible that the terms at an early date were inter-changeable, Canaan being
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geographical and Amorite ethnical . The wider extension of the use of Amurru by the Babylonians and Assyrians is complicated by the fact that it was even applied to a district in the neighbourhood of Babylonia . If the people of the first Babylonian dynasty (about 21st century B.C.) called them-selves " Amorites," as Ranke seems to have shown, it is possible that some feeling of
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common origin was recognized at that early date . See Ranke, Bab . Exiled .

Pennsylvania, series D, iii . 33 sqq . ; and for general information, W . M . Muller, Asien u . Europa, 217 sqq . ; Pinches, Old Testament,
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Index (s.v.) . The people of Amar are represented on the
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Egyptian monuments with yellow skin, blue eyes, red eyebrows and beard, whence it has been conjectured that they were akin to the Libyans (
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Sayre, Expositor,
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July 1888) . Senir, the " Amorite " name of
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Hermon (Deut. iii . 9), appears to be identical with Saniru in the Lebanon, mentioned by Shalmaneser I1 . In the Old Testament the chief references may be classified as follows:—primitive inhabit-ants generally, Is. xvii . 9 (on text see
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comm.), Ezek. xvi .

3 ; a people W. of Jordan, Josh. x . 5; Judg. i . 34-36; Deut. i . 7, 44; Gen. xiv . 7, xlviii . 22 ; E. of Jordan, Num. xxi . 13, 21 sqq.; Josh. ii. io,

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xxiv . 8 ; Judg. x . 8 . See further CANAAN, PALESTINE .

End of Article: AMORITES
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