The Restitution Times
"Whom heaven must receive until the Times
of Restitution of all things" Acts 3:21
A series of papers devoted to the restoring of
original truth.
By Arthur & Rosalind Eedle
Oxleigh, Langham Road, Mumby, Alford, Lincs. LN13 9SQ, England
Home page www.oxleigh.freeserve.co.uk
October 17th 2001
No.12 The
location of Haran
When Abram left Ur of the Chaldees, we are told that he took up residence in Haran, traditionally located in the far
north, on the eastern side of the River Euphrates. Bible atlases universally
place Haran in this position, and as far as I am aware, there are no expositors who
even question this siting. If therefore in this writing I propose to challenge
the traditional siting, it might be construed that I am impudent, merely
marching in the mainstream of today's critics who love to challenge everything
for the pleasure of a mere intellectual exercise. Far from it. For many years
the placing of Haran has been a perplexity to me, and in this paper I should like to give
what I believe are cogent reasons for questioning the traditional view. Some
may say, "Does it really matter? Does it make any significant difference
to our understanding of Genesis?" To this I would answer - wait and see
what I propose, and judge the value of it.
My main reason for being perplexed came from the passage relating to the
march that Jacob made after leaving his Uncle Laban. He travelled with his two
wives, two concubines, and eleven children. He had numerous servants, and herds
and flocks almost without number. We are told in Genesis 31:17-23, "Jacob
arose and set his sons and his wives on camels, and he drove away all his
cattle, all his livestock which he had gained, the cattle in his possession
which he had acquired in Padan-aram, to go to the land of Canaan to his father Isaac. Laban had gone
to shear his sheep, and Rachel stole her father's teraphim (household gods).
And Jacob outwitted Laban the Aramean, in that he did not tell him that he
intended to flee. He fled with all that he had, and arose and crossed the
river, and set his face towards the hill country of Gilead. When it was told Laban on the
third day that Jacob had fled, he took his kinsmen with him and pursued him for
seven days, and followed close after him into the hill country of Gilead."
A simple reading of this text shows that a distance of no less than 360 miles
had been covered in ten days by Jacob, and seven days by Laban. Was it possible
for Jacob to travel at that speed with so much cattle? Remember that it was not
flat country, but hilly, with ravines and watercourses. Furthermore, we happen
to know something of the extent of his own herds by reading about the size of
the "present" he intended to give Esau on meeting him. This is found
in Genesis 32:13-15. "Jacob took from what he had with him a present
for his brother Esau, 200 she-goats and 20 he-goats, 200 ewes and 20 rams, 30
milch camels and their colts, 40 cows and 10 bulls, 20 she-asses and 10 he-asses."
If this was the size of the present, then how much did he retain for himself?
Logic suggests that he would surely not have given more to Esau than
he kept for himself. One might hazard a guess that he selected perhaps a third
of his total as a present, but not more. It could have been a quarter. But
assuming it to have been a third, this gives us some idea of the huge concourse
of animals travelling with him, under the control of his numerous servants.
I asked the opinion of a local farmer about the problems of driving cattle. It
is, after all, far from a simple operation, and one that requires much
care and understanding of the ways and needs of beasts. I posed the question,
given that Jacob travelled with such-and-such quantities of animals, how far do
you think he could travel in one day without overburdening them? 5 miles?
10 miles? 15 miles? 20 miles? He answered, "Certainly he could have
managed five miles, but it is doubtful he could have achieved more than ten,
depending on the terrain." This being the case, a little simple arithmetic
tells us that in ten days Jacob could have travelled 50 miles at five miles per
day, or 100 miles at ten miles per day. To have travelled the 360 miles
traditionally posed for this journey would have meant 36 miles per day, which
is many times greater than any farmer would allow. Here then is the problem. If
we have interpreted the text of Genesis correctly, then Haran must have been much nearer to the
country of Gilead than its traditional position east
of the Euphrates.
I should mention here that some versions of Genesis actually translate
"the river" by "the Euphrates", which is not a translation at all but
an interpretation quite unwarranted by the Hebrew text. However, let us assume
for a moment that the Euphrates was intended. The point at which Jacob would have crossed the river
would have been after crossing two other rivers, and when arriving at the Euphrates he would have found the river too
wide and too deep to allow a crossing other than by ferry. Even supposing that
such ferries existed, the time required to take that quantity of cattle across,
a few at a time, would have delayed his departure by a considerable time, thus
reducing the already slow speed, and cutting down the distance he could have
travelled in ten days. This makes the journey even more impossible according to
the stated facts.
The trouble is that no one seems to have found another place called Haran,
whereas the traditional place in Mesopotamia was well known in antiquity, being
(as the name implied) a "cross-roads", in other words an important
position on trade routes. Furthermore, another place in the vicinity was called
Nahor, the name of one of Terah's sons, thereby making it seem more likely that
the traditional position was the correct one. "See how simple it is,"
the expositors say, "Haran and Nahor, two towns quite near to
each other, named after each brother. It must be the correct
location." On the surface, the English reader might very well be
impressed by such an argument, not realising that a fatal flaw exists, which
would be spotted immediately by any Jewish reader. Terah had two sons,
named Nahor and Haran, which the Book of Jashar says were twins. The spelling of Haran (the man) in Hebrew derives from
HAR, meaning a mountain. Hence Haran means
"mountaineer." But the spelling of the town should be
transliterated as Charan, a word meaning "cross-roads", as mentioned
above. The similarity is therefore misleading. The two words are in fact quite
distinct. Remember also that Haran died in Ur before Terah and Abram started this
excursion.
A further problem arises when reading the story of Eliezer's visit to obtain a
wife for Isaac. Genesis 24:10 reads, "Then the servant . . . arose and
went to Mesopotamia, to the city of Nahor." Surely this settles it. We
all know where Mesopotamia is, the region between the rivers Euphrates and Tigris. The very word Mesopotamia is derived from Greek,
mesos=middle, and potamos=river, i.e. (the land) between the rivers. This is a
translation of the Hebrew Aram-Naharaim, having an identical meaning, but with
the additional information provided by the Hebrew dual ending, making
it "Aram of the two rivers."
We have already seen that Jacob lived in a region known as Padan-aram, meaning
"the fields of Aram". So where was the
district and country of Aram, usually translated Syria? In Isaiah 7:8 we
are told that "The head (i.e. capital) of Syria (Aram) is Damascus." Ancient Syria consisted of what is now Syria, together with much of what is Lebanon, which is derived from Laban's
name, "the land of Laban." Biblical students and
historians have assumed that an additional region of Syria was to be
found north of the Euphrates, but my own opinion is that the traditional site
of Haran would never have been called Aram-naharaim, "Aram of the two
rivers," because the Tigris and Euphrates are too far apart in that
northernmost part of the country to have warranted such a name. To refer to the
southern country of Babylonia as "mesopotamia" would be more in keeping with the etymology
of the word.
To summarise the last paragraph, Padan-aram, "the fields of Aram", and Aram-naharaim, "Aram of the two rivers", must refer
to some part of Syria, of which Damascus was the capital city. Could it have
been that Abram never went to the northern city of Charan after all, but that he sojourned
for some years in another place, also called Aram-naharaim? This is where
a new search must begin.
Josephus (Antiquities, Book 1, chapter VII) says, "Nicolaus of
Damascus, in the fourth book of his history, says thus:- 'Abram reigned at
Damascus, being a foreigner, who came with an army out of the land above
Babylon, called the land of the Chaldeans'. . . . . Now the name of Abram is
even still famous in the country of Damascus; and there is shown a village named
from him, "the Habitation of Abram""
In the "Chronicles of Jerahmeel" (Chapter 35 §2) we read,
"Now it came to pass, when Abram came from Babylon, he betook himself to
Damascus, he and his household, and was made King over that City; for Eliezer
was then the Ruler of Damascus, but when he saw that the Lord was with Abram,
he presented him with the Kingdom and surrendered himself to his service. And
I, Jerahmeel, have discovered in the Book of Nicolaus of Damascus that there existed a certain
neighbourhood in Damascus called "the Dwelling Place of Abram". This they honoured
exceedingly."
Ancient Jewish writers say (see Shalshalet Hakabala, folio 77§1) that the
servants of Abram built Damascus, and that he reigned over it.
According to the Hastings Bible Dictionary (Article on Damascus) the Moslem tradition makes Eliezer
the founder of the City of Damascus, and Abram King over the City
before he went south into Palestine.
In Genesis 15:1-3 we read, "The word of the Lord came to Abram in a
vision, 'Fear not, Abram, I am your shield; your reward shall be very great.'
But Abram said, 'O Lord God, what will You give me, for I continue childless,
and the heir of my house is Eliezer of Damascus?' And Abram said, 'Behold You have
given me no offspring; and a servant born in my house will be my heir.' On the surface this suggests that
Eliezer was "born in his house" as a servant. According to the
current laws of those days, a childless man would leave his estate to the chief
servant. But here again, there is an anomaly in the Hebrew which first needs
our attention. In the original it reads, "the heir of my house is this
Damesek (of) Eliezer." Damesek is the spelling of Damascus in Hebrew. In this reading it makes
Damesek the name of Eliezer's son, hence clearing up the contradiction with
other statements made above, where Eliezer was King of Damascus. It seems that
when Eliezer threw in his lot with Abram, and became his chief servant, a son
was born to him, to whom he gave the name of the City in which they dwelt, not
an improbable action at all for those days. This being the case, it implies
that Abram was not only King of Damascus, but that he dwelled there for some
time, Damesek being the "servant born in my house."
All this is reasonable to follow, but it does not eliminate the main source of
the problem, namely that he was said to dwell at Haran, and that the town was located
"between the two rivers." How can this problem be solved?
I telephoned the Royal Geographic Society in London for help. As a result, after
several investigations, I was sent a map of Damascus on which, to my delight, I found
that some miles east of the City there is a village by the name of
Harran-el-Aouamid, (the last word being pronounced Awamid). Furthermore, it was
located between two famous rivers, mentioned in the Bible in the days of
Elisha, when Naaman the Syrian went to be healed. On being asked to wash in the
Jordan, a muddy river, he complained, saying "Are
not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the rivers of Israel?" The Abana is now called the Barada.
In Grecian days it was called the Chrysorrhoas, meaning "Golden flowing
stream" which flowed through the City of Damascus and supplied it with water from the
Anti-Lebanon
range. The
Pharpar is now the Awaj, a river rising east of Mount Hermon. These rivers render the environs
of Damascus, though bordering on a desert, one
of the loveliest spots on earth. Harran-el-Awamid lies between these two
rivers, and hence serves our text admirably. Aram-Naharaim, "Aram of the two rivers" is the
amazingly fertile plain stretching from Damascus City out to the marshy regions some 25
miles eastwards, where Harran is located. Incidentally, I asked a friend who's spent some years in
the Lebanon, and who spoke Arabic, what the word Awamid
meant. He said, it is the plural of a word meaning "pillars."
Hence the village is "Harran of the Pillars." Any ideas?
Finally, we may ask the first question over again. What distance could Jacob
travel with his herds and flocks in ten days? If, as the farmer suggested, it
could only be between 50 and 100 miles, what do we find here? From Harran to Gilead is a distance of 84 miles.
Furthermore, there would have been no problem at all in fording the Awaj.
If this thesis is correct, (and I have for the sake of brevity kept the account
to the bare minimum,) then all the maps in Bible atlases, showing this
part of the Levant, will have to be changed. I asked,
what value is it to make this change? In one sense, wherever one finds
anomalies in Scripture, an answer must be found. But my persuasion is that
Genesis is already mocked by people instead of treating it as a reliable
historical document. Any deeper analysis that adds to its reliability is worth
the effort.
(I intended
to add a map here showing the position of Harran el Awamid, but it required too
large a volume, and I am only allowed 15 megabytes of webspace.)