Peleset Explained

The Peleset (Egyptian: pwrꜣsꜣtj) or Pulasati are a people appearing in fragmentary historical and iconographic records in ancient Egyptian from the Eastern Mediterranean in the late 2nd millennium BCE. They are hypothesised to have been one of the several ethnic groups of which the invading Sea Peoples were said to be composed. Today, historians generally identify the Peleset with the Philistines.

Records

Very few documentary records exist, both for the Peleset and for the other groups hypothesized as Sea Peoples. One group of people recorded as participating in the Battle of the Delta were the Peleset; after this point in time, the "Sea Peoples" as a whole disappear from historical records, the Peleset being no exception. Archaeological evidence supports the existence of a migration of Peleset/Philistines from the Aegean into the southern Levant.[1]

The five known sources are below:

In some translations of the Hebrew bible (Exodus 15:14), the word Palaset is used to describe either the Philistines or Palestina.[6] [7] In the King James bible, it is translated as Palestina.[8]

Identity and origins

Today, historians generally identify the Peleset with the Philistines, or rather, vice versa. The origins of the Peleset, like much of the Sea Peoples, are not universally agreed upon - with that said, scholars have generally concluded that the bulk of the clans originated in the greater Southern European area, including western Asia Minor, the Aegean, and the islands of the Mediterranean.[9] Fellow Sea Peoples clans have likewise been identified with various Mediterranean polities, to varying acceptance: the Ekwesh with the Achaeans, the Denyen with the Danaans, the Lukka with the Lycians, the Shekelesh with the Sicels, the Sherden with the Sardinians, etc.

Older sources sometimes identify the Peleset with the Pelasgians. However, this identification has numerous problems and is usually disregarded by modern scholars. A major issue is the etymological difficulties of the "g" in "Pelasgians" becoming a "t" in the Egyptian translation, especially as the Philistine endonym already corresponded to the form P-L-S-T and therefore required no such modification to be rendered as Peleset in the Egyptian language.[10]

Historian Jan Dressen has proposed that the name Peleset should be identified as an ethnonym for the inhabitants of the Bronze Age city of Pyla on Cyprus, for which he reconstructs a Linear B reading as *pu-ra-wa-tu/Pyla-wastu. Dressen suggests that the Peleset migration to the Levant could be linked with the occupation and abandonment of Pyla, which occurred around the time span described by the Medinet Habu reliefs.[11]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Killebrew, Ann E. . The Old Testament in Archaeology and History . Baylor University Press . 2017 . 978-1-4813-0743-7 . 332–333 . Ebeling . Jennie R. . The Philistines during the Period of the Judges . The biblical, Egyptian, and archaeological evidence point to nonindigenous origins of the Philistines. From the initial discovery in the early twentieth century of a distinctive Aegean-style material culture associated with the Philistines, archaeologists and historians have proposed various theories regarding the Philistines’ arrival in the Levant’s southernmost coastal plain. . Wright . J. Edward . Elliott . Mark Adam . Flesher . Paul V. McCracken . https://www.academia.edu/45145809.
  2. Web site: Text of the Papyrus Harris . Specialtyinterests.net . 2011-12-11.
  3. Bernard Bruyère, Mert Seger à Deir el Médineh, 1929, page 32-37
  4. [Alan Gardiner]
  5. Book: Ehrlich, Carl S. . The Philistines in Transition: A History from ca. 1000-730 BC . Leiden, The Netherlands . E. J. Brill . 1996 . 90-04-10426-7 . 65 .
  6. Web site: Exodus 15 Interlinear Bible . 2024-05-07 . biblehub.com.
  7. Web site: Hebrew Interlinear Layout for Exodus 15:14 (WLC • KJV) . 2024-05-07 . Blue Letter Bible .
  8. 15:14 KJV
  9. Web site: Sea People . Encyclopædia Britannica . 8 September 2012.
  10. Fritz Lochner-Hüttenbach: Die Pelasger. Arbeiten aus dem Institut für vergleichende Sprachwissenschaft in Graz. Wien, 1960, p. 141 ff.
  11. A note on the (possible) origin of the Peleset . Pasiphae: rivista di filologia e antichità egee . Driessen . Jan . XVIII . 109–115 . 2024.