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Adding short description: "Ancient Egyptian people mentioned in the Bible and related literature" (Shortdesc helper)
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{{short description|Ancient Egyptian people mentioned in the Bible and related literature}} |
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[[File:Noahsworld map Version2.png|thumb|right|250px|One reconstruction of the [[Generations of Noah]], placing the "Casluhim" in the western [[Nile Delta]].]] |
[[File:Noahsworld map Version2.png|thumb|right|250px|One reconstruction of the [[Generations of Noah]], placing the "Casluhim" in the western [[Nile Delta]].]] |
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The '''Casluhim''' or '''Casluhites''' ({{lang-he|כסלחים}}) were an ancient Egyptian people mentioned in the Bible and related literature. |
The '''Casluhim''' or '''Casluhites''' ({{lang-he|כסלחים}}) were an ancient Egyptian people mentioned in the Bible and related literature. |
The CasluhimorCasluhites (Hebrew: כסלחים) were an ancient Egyptian people mentioned in the Bible and related literature.
According to the Book of Genesis (Genesis 10:14) and the Books of Chronicles (1 Chronicles 1:12), they were descendants of Mizraim (Egypt) son of Ham, out of whom originated the Philistines.
The Egyptian form of their name is preserved in the inscriptions of the Temple of Kom Ombo as the region name Kasluḥet.[1] In the Aramaic Targums their region is called Pentpolitai understood to be derived from the Greek Pentapolis which locates the area as the north west in what is now the Cyrenaica region of Libya.[2] Another name for their region is Pekosim used in Bereshit Rabbah 37.[2]InSaadia Gaon's translation of the Pentateuch into Arabic, the Sahidic people (i.e. the people of Upper Egypt) are listed in the position of the Casluhim in Genesis 10:14 and Albiyim is listed in the position of Pathrusim, however the ordering of Casluhim and Pathrusim sometimes vary in translations [2] and the mainstream understanding is that is the Pathrusim who are the Sahidic people and the Casluhim the people of eastern Libya.
Josephus mentions the Casluhim in his Jewish Antiquities I, vi, 2 as one of the Egyptian peoples whose cities were destroyed during the Ethiopic War and who thus disappeared from history.