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Location: Paris Ile-de-France France

A civilization of trade and agriculture flourishes …

Years: 909BCE - 766BCE

A civilization of trade and agriculture flourishes in the second millennium BCE in Edom, the land to the south and east of ancient Israel (its people, the Edomites, traced by Biblical tradition to the patriarch Jacob's elder brother Esau).

The Edomites may have been connected with the Shasu and Shutu, nomadic raiders mentioned in Egyptian sources.

Indeed, a letter from an Egyptian scribe at a border fortress in the Wadi Tumilat during the reign of Merneptah reports movement of nomadic "shasu-tribes of Edom" to watering holes in Egyptian territory.

The earliest Iron Age settlements—possibly copper mining camps—date to the ninth century BCE.

The Edomites' original country, according to the Tanakh, stretches from the Sinai peninsula as far as Kadesh Barnea.

Southward, it reaches as far as Eilat, which is the seaport of Edom.

On the north of Edom is the territory of Moab.

The boundary between Moab and Edom is the Wadi Zered.

The ancient capital of Edom is Bozrah.

According to Genesis, Esau's descendants settled in this land after displacing the Horites.

It was also called the land of Seir; Mount Seir appears to have been strongly identified with them and may have been a cultic site.

In the time of Amaziah (838 BCE), Selah (Petra) is its principal stronghold, Eilat and Ezion-geber its seaports.

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