They were exiled from their land. Their descendants are still around.
Joshua certainly would have believed Moses to be an Israelite, but nobody "alleged" that Moses was an Israelite. Moses was an Israelite because of his ancestry and because of his connection to the people and he believed he was an Israelite.
Saul.See also:The Israelite kings
Koby Israelite was born on 1966-11-23.
The American Israelite was created on 1854-07-15.
Christian Israelite Church was created in 1822.
No. According to the Bible, David was an Israelite from the Tribe of Judah and Goliath was a Philistine from the city of Gath. Both of their places of origin would be found in either Israel or Palestine.
Bernard Israelite Kouchel has written: 'Book of Israelite family history =' -- subject(s): Family, Genealogy, Jews
The Torah, together with its ancient commentary (the Talmud) is the basis of Israelite law.
The Israelite's believed that the giving of the commandments reaffirmed their covenant with god
AnswerFrom a historical perspective, the makeup of Canaanite society did not contribute to the success of the Israelite conquest, because the legendary conquest did not really occur. Israel Finkelstein says that over 80 per cent of scholars do not believe the Israelite invasion happened as described in the Bible. There is no archaeological evidence of an invasion and the Canaanite hinterland remained sparsely settled until peaceful settlement began around 1250 BCE. The Book of Joshua describes events that could not have happened and even describes victories that are contradicted shortly afterwards in the biblical account. From a biblical point of view, the fact that each city was autonomous, with its own king, meant that the Canaanites did not unite effectively to stop the Israelite onslaught.
Every Israelite prophet and Sage contributed to the vitality and eternity of the Israelite religion. See this attached Related Link for some of the major names and dates.
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