Hittites: Palestine and Syria appear to have been originally inhabited by three
different tribes.1. The Semites, living on the east of the isthmus of Suez. They
were nomadic and pastoral tribes.
2. The Phoenicians, who were merchants and traders; and
3. the Hittites, who were the warlike element of this confederation
of tribes. They inhabited the whole region between the Euphrates
and Damascus, their chief cities being Carchemish on the
Euphrates, and Kadesh, now Tell Neby Mendeh, in the Orontes
valley, about six miles south of the Lake of Homs. These
Hittites seem to have risen to great power as a nation, as for a
long time they were formidable rivals of the Egyptian and
Assyrian empires. In the book of Joshua they always appear as
the dominant race to the north of Galilee. Somewhere about the
twenty-third century B.C. the Syrian confederation, led probably
by the Hittites, arched against Lower Egypt, which they took
possession of, making Zoan their capital. Their rulers were the
Hyksos, or shepherd kings. They were at length finally driven
out of Egypt. Rameses II. sought vengeance against the "vile
Kheta," as he called them, and encountered and defeated them in
the great battle of Kadesh, four centuries after Abraham.
(See JOSHUA)
They are first referred to in Scripture in the history of
Abraham, who bought from Ephron the Hittite the field and the
cave of Machpelah
(Genesis 15:20; 23:3-18) They were then settled
at Kirjath-arba. From this tribe Esau took his first two wives
(Genesis 26:34; 36:2) They are afterwards mentioned in the usual
way among the inhabitants of the Promised Land
(Exodus 23:28)
They were closely allied to the Amorites, and are frequently
mentioned along with them as inhabiting the mountains of
Palestine. When the spies entered the land they seem to have
occupied with the Amorites the mountain region of Judah
(Numbers 13:29) They took part with the other Canaanites against
the Israelites
(Joshua 9:1; 11:3) After this there are few
references to them in Scripture. Mention is made of "Ahimelech
the Hittite"
(1 Samuel 26:6) and of "Uriah the Hittite," one of
David's chief officers
(2 Samuel 23:39; 1 Chronicles 11:41) In the days of
Solomon they were a powerful confederation in the north of
Syria, and were ruled by "kings." They are met with after the
Exile still a distinct people
(Ezra 9:1) comp.
(Nehemiah 13:23-28)
The Hebrew merchants exported horses from Egypt not only for the
kings of Israel, but also for the Hittites
(1 Kings 10:28,29)
From the Egyptian monuments we learn that "the Hittites were a
people with yellow skins and 'Mongoloid' features, whose
receding foreheads, oblique eyes, and protruding upper jaws are
represented as faithfully on their own monuments as they are on
those of Egypt, so that we cannot accuse the Egyptian artists of
caricaturing their enemies. The Amorites, on the contrary, were
a tall and handsome people. They are depicted with white skins,
blue eyes, and reddish hair, all the characteristics, in fact,
of the white race" (Sayce's The Hittites). The original seat of
the Hittite tribes was the mountain ranges of Taurus. They
belonged to Asia Minor, and not to Syria.