No.
The Canaanites are believed to have founded Jerusalem around 3000 BCE. Archaeological evidence suggests that the city was established as a small settlement during the Bronze Age. Over time, it grew in significance and became an important urban center in the region. The Canaanites referred to the city as "Jebus," which later became known as Jerusalem.
The Canaanites (Though there is a school of thought that says the hebrews didn't fight the Canaanites, but that they WERE the canaanites.)
None. Jerusalem was a city built originally by Proto-Canaanites and developed by the Jebusites before the Israelites conquered the city and made it their capital.
The Canaanites were descendants of Canaan. Canaan was the son of Ham. Ham was the son of Noah.
According to The Bible, the Israelites came to live in Canaan because God promised them this land. They conquered the Canaanites, city by city, with bloody violence.According to modern scholars, the early Israelites were really Canaanites themselves, who, for whatever reason, migrated peacefully to the previously sparsely occupied Canaanite hinterland. After a period of centuries, their language and culture diverged from those of their West Semitic neighbours, and the people began to believe that they had always been a separate nation. Scholars now say that there never was a military invasion of the land of the Canaanites.
The Canaanites in Jericho were an ancient Semitic people who inhabited the city of Jericho and surrounding regions during the Bronze Age. They are often associated with the broader Canaanite culture, characterized by city-states, agricultural practices, and polytheistic religious beliefs. Jericho is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world, and it played a significant role in biblical narratives, particularly in the conquest stories found in the Book of Joshua. The Canaanites in Jericho are often depicted as adversaries of the Israelites during their entry into the Promised Land.
The Canaanites
Who_were_the_canaanites_and_perizzite
They didn't. The Canaanites lived in Canaan, nowhere near Mount Sinai.
According to the Torah, the ancient Israelites conquered the Canaanites, but there is no mention of genocide. Some modern scholars theorize that there was no battle because the ancient Israelites WERE the Canaanites.
The Israelites were commanded to take Canaan (Israel) from the Canaanites (Deuteronomy ch.7), but they did so incompletely, allowing Canaanites to remain in various regions (Judges ch.1-2).
According to the Torah, they only conquered the Canaanites. Some historians and scientists theorize that they actually *WERE* the Canaanites.