The Philistines were a sea people who arrived in the Levant around 1250 BCE and settled in the fertile coastal plains and foothills from the Egyptian border north to present-day Tel Aviv.
Over time, they absorbed a wave of Nabatean immigrants and were then culturally absorbed by their Canaanite neighbours to the north. After the Alexandrian conquests, they absorbed the Greek language and culture, as did their neighbours, other than the Jews. Because of this, by New Testament times we find them sometimes see them referred to by the Jews as "Greeks", sometimes as gentiles.
The former Philistines were pagans in the Roman Empire, but with the arrival of Christianity, became Christians. The Arabs overran Palestine in the seventh century CE, after which most became Muslims but a significant number remained Christians even to this day. Modern Palestinians are considered to be descended from various races in the region, including Philistines, Canaanites, Greeks, Romans, Nabataeans, Peninsular Arabs and others.
A:
Genealogical records were not kept, so we can only look at what we know from history, not from family trees. We know that the Philistines still existed as an identifiable ethnic group into the post-Exilic period, although they had adapted to Canaanite culture and religious beliefs, as well as adopting the Greek language, for which they are often called 'Greeks' in The Bible. Incursions by the Greeks and Romans also resulted in foreign settlers, who would have been assimilated into the indigenous population. We know that in the New Testament period, these Gentiles continued to live along the Levantine coast. There is no historical reason for these people simply to disappear, so we can assume they and their descendants continued to exist in Palestine. The Arabic conquerors brought Islam and some fresh settlers, and some of the locals converted to Islam. Although the Palestinians tend to be regarded as Arabs, almost half the population of the Palestinian territories were Christian in the middle of the twentieth century. This proportion has fallen dramatically because it has been easier for Christians to migrate to Western countries of refuge, than for Muslims. Since the invading Arabs were Muslims, these Christians (and many of the Muslims) must have been descended from people who lived in Palestine before the Arabic invasion.
Clearly, the modern Palestinians are of mixed blood, just as modern Jews are, but the Philistines would be among the ancestors of modern Palestinians.
The Philistines were several groups of sea-faring people who lived within the biblical promised land. The Bible states that these groups were destroyed, but modern scholarship cannot attribute any major demographic shift during the period as the biblical genocide would indicate.
yes
AnswerThe Philistines were a sea people who arrived in the southern Levant around 1250 BCE. They are believed to have come from the Greek islands.
Dawuad (as). Prophet And he was a king
Judah.
The Philistines lived in what is modern-day Palestine and Israel. The Trojans llived in Troy, just southeast of present day Istanbul (in what is now the northwest coastal area of modern-day Turkey).
No. After the Northern Kingdom of 10 tribes of Israel were taken captive circa 722-718 BC, the Assyrians conquerors placed previously displaced peoples of the area around Mesopotamia into the northern land of Israel. Philistines are believed to have Grecian roots.
They live in Northern Sudan.
Yes...I know one of Sgt Yorks' descendants in Tennessee....what info are you looking for?
Descendants of Illyrum are Today's Albanians.
No, although they have a common ancestor
The United States of America and the United Kingdom.
Wooly mammoths have no modern day direct descendants, but they were closely related to the ancestors of modern elephants.
That is the correct spelling of the Biblical people, the Philistines.
yes there are. currenly living in England :D
the philistines had a giant named goliath in their army
The Philistines took away the ten commandments from the ark.