Perizzite

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

Fausset's Bible Dictionary [1]

One of the ten doomed tribes of Canaan ( Genesis 15:19-21). Six including Perizzite are enumerated  Exodus 3:8;  Exodus 3:17. The Canaanite and Perizzite are joined in  Genesis 13:7. From  Joshua 11:3;  Joshua 17:15, they seem to have occupied the woods and mountains. Bochart (Phaleg. iv. 36) makes them an agrarian race living in villages only, the name signifying "rustics", Pagani . Bezek was their stronghold, and Adoni-bezek their chief ( Judges 1:4-5), in the S. of Palestine, also on the western sides of Mount Carmel ( Joshua 17:15-18). Reduced to bond service by Solomon ( 1 Kings 9:20;  2 Chronicles 7:7). The Hebrew Perezot , "unwalled country villages" or "towns," were inhabited by peasants engaged in agriculture like the Arab Fellahs ( Deuteronomy 3:5;  1 Samuel 6:18;  Ezekiel 38:11;  Zechariah 2:4).

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [2]

(Heb. Perizzi', פְרַזַּי , always in the sing. and with the article; Sept. Φερεζαῖος , in Ezra Φερεσθεί ), a Canaanitish tribe, already known in the time of Abraham, inhabiting a mountainous region ( Genesis 13:7; comp. 15:20), which they eventually yielded to Ephraim and Judah ( Joshua 11:3;  Joshua 17:15;  Judges 1:4-5). They were kindred to the Canaanites strictly so called ( Exodus 23:23; Judges 1:45): sometimes Canaanites and Perizzites are put for all the other tribes of Canaan ( Genesis 13:7;  Genesis 34:30); while in other places the Perizzites are enumerated with various other tribes of the same stock ( Genesis 15:20;  Exodus 3:8;  Exodus 3:17;  Deuteronomy 7:1, etc.). They are not named in the catalogue of Genesis 10; so that their origin, like that of other small tribes, such as the Avites, and the similarly named Gerizzites, is left in obscurity. They are continually mentioned in the formula so frequently occurring to express the Promised Land ( Genesis 15:20;  Exodus 3:8;  Exodus 3:17;  Exodus 23:23;  Exodus 33:2;  Exodus 34:11;  Deuteronomy 7:1;  Deuteronomy 20:17;  Joshua 3:10;  Joshua 9:1;  Joshua 24:11;  Judges 3:5;  Ezra 9:1;  Nehemiah 9:8). They appear, however, with somewhat greater distinctness on several occasions. On Abram's first entrance into the land it is said to have been occupied by "the Canaanite and the Perizzite" ( Genesis 13:7). As the separation of Abram and Lot, there recorded, took place at Bethel, we may infer that the Perizzites were then in that vicinity. Jacob also, after the massacre of the Shechemites, uses the same expression, complaining that his sons had "made him to stink among the inhabitants of the land, among the Canaanite and the Perizzite" ( Genesis 34:30). This seems to locate the Perizzites near Shechem. So also in the detailed records of the conquest given in the opening of the book of Judges (evidently from a distinct source from those in Joshua), Judah and Simeon are said to have found their territory occupied by "the Canaanite and the Perizzite" ( Judges 1:4-5), with Bezek (a place not yet discovered, but apparently not far from Jerusalem, and hence probably on the south-western boundary of Ephraim) as their stronghold, and Adoni-bezek their most noted chief. Thus too a late tradition, preserved in  2 Esdras 1:21, mentions only "the Canaanites, the Pheresites,-and the Philistines," as the original ten ants of the country. The notice just cited from the. book of Judges locates them in the southern part of the Holy Land. Another independent and equally remarkable fragment of the history of the conquest seems to speak of them as occupying, with the Rephaim, or giants, the "forest country" on the western flanks of Mount Carmel ( Joshua 17:15-18). Here again the Canaanites only are named with them. As a tribe of mountaineers, they are enumerated in company with the Amorites, Hittites, and Jebusites in  Joshua 11:3;  Joshua 12:8; and they are catalogued among the remnants of the old population whom Solomon reduced to bondage, both in  1 Kings 9:20 and  2 Chronicles 8:7. Not only had they not been exterminated, but they even intermarried with the Israelites ( Judges 3:5-6;  Ezra 9:1). By Josephus the Perizzites do not appear to be mentioned.

The signification of the name is not by any means clear. It possibly meant rustics, dwellers in open, unwalled villages, which are denoted by a similar word ( פְּרָזוֹת ,  Ezekiel 38:11;  Esther 9:19). So also Copher Hap- Perazi, A.V. "country villages" ( 1 Samuel 6:18); Arey Hap-Perazi, "unwalled towns" ( Deuteronomy 3:5). In both these passages the Sept. understands the Perizzites to be alluded to, and translates accordingly. In  Joshua 16:10 it adds the Perizzites to the Canaanites as inhabitants of Gezer. Ewald ( Geschichte, 1:317) inclines to believe that they were the same people with the Hittites. But against this there is the fact that both they and the Hittites appear in the same lists; and that not only in mere general formulas, but in the records of the conquest, as above. Redslob has examined the whole of these names with some care (in his Attestam. Namen den Israeliten-Staaten, Hamb. 1846), and his conclusion (p. 103) is that, while the Chavvofh were villages of tribes engaged in the care of cattle, the Perazoth were inhabited by peasants engaged in agriculture, like the Fellahs of the Arabs. This view, however, although acquiesced in by Gesenius, Thesaur. p. 1120; Hengstenberg, Beitrdge, p. 186; Keil, on  Joshua 3:10; and Kalisch, on Genesis 13 , appears to be opposed to the Biblical narrative, which everywhere classes them as a distinct branch of the Canaanites (see Reland, Palaest. p. 139; Kurtz, in Rudelloch's Zeitschr. 1845, 3:53; Jour. Sac. Lit. Oct. 1853, p. 166). (See Canaanite).

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [3]

per´i - zı̄t , pe - riz´ı̄t ( פּרזּי , perizzı̄  ; Φερεζαῖος , Pherezaı́os ): Signifies "a villager," and so corresponds with the Egyptian fellah . Hence, the Perizzite is not included among the sons of Canaan in   Genesis 10 , and is also coupled with the Canaanite ( Genesis 13:7;  Genesis 34:30;  Judges 1:4 ). We hear, accordingly, of Canaanites and Perizzites at Shechem ( Genesis 34:30 ), at Bezek in Judah ( Judges 1:4 ) and, according to the reading of the Septuagint, at Gezer ( Joshua 16:10 ). In  Deuteronomy 3:5 and   1 Samuel 6:18 , where the King James Version has "unwalled towns" and "country villages," the Septuagint has "Perizzite," the literal translation of the Hebrew being "cities of the Perizzite" or "villager" and "village of the Perizzite." The same expression occurs in  Esther 9:19 , where it is used of the Jews in Elam. In  Joshua 17:15 ,  Joshua 17:18 , where the Manassites are instructed to take possession of the forest land of Carmel, "Perizzites and Rephaim" are given as the equivalent of "Canaanite."

Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature [4]

Per´izzite, a Canaanitish tribe inhabiting the mountainous region which they eventually yielded to Ephraim and Judah (;; ). They were kindred to the Canaanites strictly so called : sometimes Canaanites and Perizzites are put for all the other tribes of Canaan ; while in other places the Perizzites are enumerated with various other tribes of the same stock (;;; , etc.). A residue of the Perizzites still remained in the time of Solomon, and were by him subjected to bond-service .

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