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The Bible says that the Hebrew people were descended from the Patriarch Israel. The people were therefore called Israelites. Some secular answers are also possible. After all, if the people were always called Israelites, then they would probably never have been called Hebrews. The Hebrews came to occupy two separate nations, Israel and Judah. Some scholars, such as the archaeologist Israel Finklestein, say these nations were always separate, and that there was never a united Hebrew kingdom under David and Solomon. After the northern kingdom, Israel, fell to the Assyrians, many refugees fled south into Judah. There is some evidence that, faced with this massive influx, the kings of Judah attempted to create a sense of national unity, not only in the religious reforms they undertook, but also by referring to all the people as 'Israelites'. This view would say that the Hebrew people eventually became known as Israelites out of political necessity in the eighth century BCE.

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17y ago

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