-Caveat Lector-

First off, there hasn't been a time since December 6th, 1941, that we
HAVEN'T been at war.  Was it not a "liberal" group that got us into
the Balkans, lobbed cruise missiles at Kampground of Afghanistan
(KOA) and aspirin factories, and made a few other interesting
decisions?

> Finally, and as a parting shot, I would like to post something for the
> careful and thoughful consideration of all the anti-Zionist/borderline
> anti-Semitics on the list

"And when you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to
pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen
by men."  Matt 5~

> You might well find yourselves fighting against God.

Or with or against someone else's G*D.  Therein the crux of the whole
maelstromic cauldron of confusion lies.  Now ...

Just who are the "anti-Semites"?

When we look at the totality of the region, it appears we have
another family feud.  A<>E<>R

@ http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13706a.htm

}}>Begin

Semites
The term Semites is applied to a group of peoples closely related in
language, whose habitat is Asia and partly Africa. The expression is
derived from the Biblical table of nations (Genesis 10), in which
most of these peoples are recorded as descendants of Noah's son  Sem.

The term Semite was proposed at first for the languages related to
the Hebrew by Ludwig Schlözer, in Eichhorn's "Repertorium", vol. VIII
(Leipzig, 1781), p. 161. Through Eichhorn the name then came into
general usage (cf. his "Einleitung in das Alte Testament" (Leipzig,
1787), I, p. 45. In his "Gesch. der neuen Sprachenkunde", pt. I
(Göttingen, 1807) it had already become a fixed technical term. Since
then the name has been generally adopted, except that modern science
uses it in a somewhat wider sense to include all those Peoples who
are either demonstrably of Semitic origin, or who appear in history
as completely Semitized.
CLASSIFICATION
In historic times all Western Asia (see below), with the exception of
the peninsula of Asia Minor, was Semitic. From the philological point
of view the Semitic peoples are divided into four chief Babylonian-
Assyrian Semites (East Semites), Chanaanitic Semites, (West Semites),
Aramaic Semites (North Semites), and Arabian Semites (South Semites).
The last-named group is divided into North and South Arabians, of
which last the Abyssinians are a branch. The first three groups are
usually termed North Semites, in contrast to the Arabian group, or
South Semites. But the classification of the Babylonian with the
Aramaic and Chanaanitic Semites is not permissible from the
philological point of view.
TERRITORY
The great mountain-chains which begin at the Syro-Cilician boundary,
and then curving towards the south-west extend to the Persian Gulf,
separate on the north and east the territory of the Semites from that
of the other peoples of Western Asia. It includes the Syro-Arabian
plain with the civilized countries extending to the east and west and
the Arabian Peninsula which joins it on the south. The lowlands to
the east are formed by the Euphrates and the Tigris, and include the
homes of two very ancient civilizations, in the north the rather
undulating Mesopotamia, in the south the low Babylonian plain; the
land extending to the west from the lower Euphrates is called
Chaldea. These are the territories of the East Semitic tribes and
states. On the west lies Northern Syria, then the Lebanon Mountains
with the intervening Coelo-Syria, the oasis of Damascus, the seat of
an ancient culture, the Hauran, and in the the midst of the desert
the oasis of Palmyra (Tadmor). These territories were at a later
period occupied principally by Aramaic tribes. The territory on the
coast extending westwards from Lebanon, and Palestine, which joins it
on the south, are the principal seats of the Chanaanitic Semites. The
mountainous country to the east of Arabia and the Sinaitic peninsula
extending to the west of Arabia, belong to Arabia proper, the
territory of the South Semites.
ORIGINAL HOME
The tribes which inhabited these territories, and to some extent
still inhabit them, show in language, traits, and character a sharply
characterized individuality which separates them distinctly from
other peoples. Their languages axe closely related to one another,
not being almost independent branches of language, like the great
groups of Indo-Germanic languages, but rather dialects of a single
linguistic group. Physically, also, the Semitic form it is found in
Arabia. Here also the phonetics and partly also the grammatical
structure of the Semitic language, are most purely, as the vocabulary
is most completely, preserved. From these as well as from other
circumstances the conclusion has been drawn that Arabia should be
considered the original home of the Semitic peoples. All the racial
peculiarities of the Semites are best explained from the character of
a desert people.  All Semites settled in civilized lands are,
therefore, to be considered offshoots of the desert tribes, which
were detached one after the other from the parent stem. This pressing
forward towards civilized lands was a continuous movement, often in a
slow development lasting through centuries but often also in mighty
and sudden invasions, the last of which appears in that of the Arabs
of Islam. The further question as to how the original ancestors of
the Semites came to Arabia, is for the present beyond historical
knowledge.
EAST SEMITES
The first emigrants from Arabia who succeeded in acquiring new landed
possessions were the Semitic Babylonians. In Babylonia the invaders
proceeded to adopt the highly-developed civilization of an ancient
non-Semitic people, the Sumerians, and with it the cuneiform
alphabets which the latter had invented. When this invasion occurred
is not known; but that it was accomplished in several stages, and
after temporary settlements on the borders, is unquestionable. By
3000 B.C. the dominion of the Semites in Babylonia was an
accomplished fact.
Ethnologically considered, the Babylonians are a mixed people,
composed partly of the Sumerian and the most ancient Semitic
emigrants, partly also of the continuously invading West Semites, and
further more of Kassites and other people, all of whom were
amalgamated. The principal seat of the Semitic element was in the
north, in the land of Accad, while in the south the Sumerians were
most numerous. Under Sargon and Naram-Sin was completed the
amalgamation of the Sumerian and the Accadian (Semitic) civilization,
which in the age of Hammurabi appears as an accomplished fact. The
mighty expansion of the kingdom to the Mediterranean naturally
resulted in the wide extension of the Sumerian-Accadian civilization,
and for a millennium and a half Babel was the intellectual centre of
Western Asia. As is proved by the Tel-el-Amarna letters, the
Babylonian language and script were known in Western Asia as well as
in Egypt and Cyprus, at least at the courts of the rulers. At an
early period the Semites must have invaded the mountainous territory
to the east of Babylonia. Not until about 2300 B.C. do we find a
foreign element in Elam. Before this time, according to inscriptions
which have been found, Babylonian Semites lived there.
On the Accadian border dwelt the Semitic tribes of Mesopotamia, which
are included under the general term Subari. The centre of this region
is desert, but on the banks of the Euphrates, Chaboras, and Tigris
are strips of land capable of cultivation, upon which at an early
period Semitic settlements were established for the most part
probably under local dynasties. The Subari include also the
Assyrians, who founded on the right bank of the Tigris — between the
mouths of the two Zab rivers a city which bore the same name as the
race and its god. All these tribes and states were under the
influence of Babylonia and its civilization, and Babylonian-Semitic
was their official and literary language. But while in Babylonia the
Semitic element was amalgamated with different strata of the original
population, in Mesopotamia the Semitic type was more purely
preserved.
Briefly recapitulating the political history of the Eastern Semites,
we may distinguish four periods. The first includes essentially the
fortunes of the ancient Babylonian realm; the second witnesses the
predominance of Assur, involved in constant struggles with Babylonia,
which still maintained its independence. During the third period
Amur, after the overthrow of Babylonia, achievers the summit of its
power; this is followed, after the destruction of Nineveh, by the
short prosperity of the new Babylonian Kingdom under the rule of the
Chaldeans. This power, and with it the entire dominion of the Semites
in south-western Asia, was overthrown by the Persians.
CHANAANITIC SEMITES
This designation was chosen because the races belonging to this group
can best be studied in the land of Chanaan. They represent a second
wave of emigration into civilized territory. About the middle of the
third millennium before Christ they were a race of nomads in a state
of transition to settled life, whose invasions were directed against
the East as well as the West. About this time there constantly appear
in Babylonia the names of gods, rulers, and other persons of a
distinctly Chanaanitic character. To these belongs the so called
first Babylonian dynasty, the most celebrated representative of which
is Hammurabi. Its rule probably denotes the high tide of that new
invasion of Babylonia, which also strongly influenced Assyria. In
time the new stratum was absorbed by the existing population, and
thereby became a part of Babylonian Semitism. Through the same
invasion the civilized territory of the West received a new
population, and even Egypt was affected. For the Hyksos (shepherd
kings) are in the main only the last offshoot of that Chanaanitic
invasion, and in their rulers we see a similar phenomenon as that of
the Chanaanitic dynasty of Babylonia. As regards the Semites in
Chanaan itself, the earliest wave of the invasion, which in
consequence of subsequent pressure was ultimately pushed forward to
the coast, is known to us under the name of the Phoenicians. A
picture of the conditions of the races and principalities of
Palestine in the fifteenth century B.C. is given in the Tel-el-Amarna
letters. In them we find a series of Chanaanitic glosses, which show
that even at that time the most important of those characteristic
peculiarities had been developed, which gave their distinctive
character to the best known Chanaanitic dialects, the Phoenician and
the Hebrew. Further examples of Chanaanitic language of the second
millennium, especially as regards the vocabulary, are the Semitic
glosses in the Egyptian.
To the Chanaanitic races settled in Palestine belong also the Hebrew
immigrants under Abraham, from whom again the Moabites and Ammonites
separated. A people closely related to the Hebrews were also the
Edomites in the Seir mountains, who later appear under the name of
Idumaeans in Southern Judea. These mountains had before them been
settled by the Horities who were partly expelled, partly absorbed by
the Edomites. A last wave of the immigration into Chanaan are the
Israelites, descendants of the Hebrews, who after centuries of
residence in Egypt, and after forty years of nomadic life in the
desert, returned to the land of their fathers, of which they took
possession after long and weary struggles. That the influence of
Chanaanitic Semitism extended far into the North is proved by the two
Zendsirli inscriptions: the so-called Hadad inscription of the ninth
century, and the Panammu inscription of the eighth century, the
language of which shows a Chanaanitic character with Aramaic
intermixture. On the other hand, the so-called building inscription
of Bir-Rokeb, dating from the last third of the eighth century, is
purely Aramaic — a proof that the Aramaization of Northern Syria was
in full progress.
ARAMAIC SEMITES
These represent a third wave of Semitic immigration. In cuneiform
inscriptions dating from the beginning of the fourteenth century B.C.
They are mentioned as Ahlami. Their expansion probably took place
within the fifteenth and fourteenth centuries B.C. from the plain
between the mouth of the Euphrates and the mountains of Edom. As
early as the reign of Salmanasar I (1300) they had pressed far into
Mesopotamia and become a public scourge, in consequence of which the
stream of immigration could not longer be restrained. During the new
expansion of Assyrian power under Tiglath-Pileser I (1118-1093 B.C.)
his reports enumerate victories over the Aramaeans. Their further
advance into the territory of the Euphrates and towards Syria took
place about 1100-1000 B.C. By then ninth century all Syria was
Aramiaicized; many small states were formed, principally successors
of the Hittite Kingdom. The most important Arammaean principality was
that of Damascus, which was destroyed by Tiglath-Pileser III in 732.
In like manner the remaining Aramaic states succumbed. A new
rebellion was suppressed by Sargon, and with this the rule of the
Aramaeans in Syria ended. In the meanwhile, the Aramaean element in
Mesopotamia was constantly growing stronger. At the beginning of the
ninth century we hear of a number of small Aramaic states or Bedouin
territories there. They were subdued under Assurnasirpal (Asshur-
nasir-pal) III (884-860), and the independence of their princes was
destroyed by his successor Salmanasar (Shalmaneser) II. Nevertheless,
the immigration continued. In the struggles of Assyria the Aramaeans
of Mesopotamia always made common cause with its enemies and even
under Assurbanipal they were allied with his opponents. From this
time we hear nothing more of them. They were probably absorbed by the
remaining population.
Their language alone, which the Arammans in consequence of their
numerical superiority forced upon these countries, survived in the
sphere of the North Semitic civilization, and was not obliterated
until the Islam's conquest. The potent Arabic displaced the Aramaic
dialects with the exception of a few remnants. Since the second half
of the eighth century the use of Aramaic as a language of intercourse
can be proved in Assyria, and about the same time it certainly
prevailed in Babylonia among the commercial classes of the
population. In the West also their language extended in a southerly
direction as far as Northern Arabia. For Aramaic had become the
general language of commerce, which the Semitic peoples of Western
Asia found themselves compelled to adopt in their commercial,
cultural, and political relations. The Aramaic elements of the
population were absorbed by the other peoples of the existing
civilized lands. They developed a distinct nationality in Damascus.
In Mesopotamia itself, in the neighbourhood of Edessa, Mardin, and
Nisibis, Aramaic individuality was long preserved. But the culture of
this country was afterwards strongly permeated by Hellenism. One of
the last political formations of the Aramaeans is found in Palmyra,
which in the first century B.C. became the centre of a flourishing
state under Arabian princes. It flourished until the ambitious design
of Odenathus and Zenobia to play the leading part in the East caused
its destruction by the Romans. A small fragment of Aramaic-speaking
population may be still found in Ma'lula and two other villages of
the Anti-Lebanon. So-called New Syrian dialects, descendants of the
East Aramaic, are spoken in Tur'Abdin in Mesopotamia, to the east and
north of Mosul, and in the neighbouring mountains of Kurdistan, as
well as on the west shore of Lake Urmia. Of these Aramaic-speaking
Christians a part lives on what was clearly ancient Aramaic
territory; but for those on Lake Urmia we must assume a later
immigration. Nestorian bishops of Urmia are mentioned as early as
A.D. 1111.
ARABIC-ABYSSINIAN SEMITES
A. Arabs
The most powerful branch of the Semitic group of peoples, are
indigenous to Central and Northern Arabia, where even to-day the
original character is most purely preserved. At an early period they
pressed forward into the neighbouring territories, partly to the
North and partly to the South. In accordance with linguistic
differences they are divided into North and South Arabians. Northern
Arabia is composed partly of plains and deserts, and is, therefore,
generally speaking, the home of wandering tribes of Bedouins. The
South, on the other hand, is fertile and suitable for a settled
population. For this reason we find here at an early date political
organizations, and the sites of ruins and inscriptions bear witness
to the high culture which once prevailed. The natural richness of the
country and its favourable situation on the seacoast made the South
Arabians at an early period an important commercial people. In the
fertile lowlands of the South Arabian Djôf the Kingdom of Ma'in
(Minaeans) flourished. It is generally dated as early as the middle
of the second millennium before Christ, although for the present it
is better to maintain a somewhat sceptical attitude as regards this
hypothesis. At all events, the Minaeans, at an early period, probably
avoiding the desert by a journey along the eastern coast, emigrated
from North-eastern Arabia. To the south and south-east of the
Minaeans were the Katabans and the Hadramotites, who were cognate in
language and who stood in active commercial relations with Ma'in,
under whose political protectorate they seem to have lived. The
spirit of enterprise of this kingdom is shown by the foundation of a
commercial colony in the north-western part of the peninsula in the
neighbourhood of the Gulf of Akabah, viz., Ma'in-Mussran
(Mizraimitic, Egypt Ma'in). The downfall of the Ma'in kingdom was,
according to the usual assumption, connected with the rise of the
Sabaean kingdom. The Sabaeans had likewise emigrated from the North,
and in constant struggles had gradually spread their dominion over
almost all Southern Arabia. Their capital was Ma'rib. Their numerous
monuments and inscriptions extend from about 700 B.C. until almost
the time of Mohammed. At the height of its power, Saba received a
heavy blow by the loss of the monopoly of the carrying trade between
India and the northern regions, when the Ptolemies entered into
direct trade relations with India. Still the Sabaean Kingdom
maintained itself, with varying fortune, until about A.D. 300. After
its fall the once powerful Yeman was constantly under foreign
domination, at last under Persian. Ultimately, Southern Arabia was
drawn into the circle of Islam. Its characteristic language was
replaced by the Northern Arabic, and in only a few localities of the
southern coast are remnants of it to be found: the so-called Mahri in
Mahraland and the Socotri on the Island of Socotra.
Northern Arabia had in the meanwhile followed its own path. To the
east of Mussran to far into the Syrian desert we hear of the activity
of the Aribi (at first in the ninth century B.C.), from whom the
entire peninsula finally received its name. Assurbanibal, especially,
boasts of important victories over them in his struggles with them
for the mastery of Edom, Moab, and the Hauran (c. 650). Some of the
tribes possessed the germs of political organization, as is shown in
their government by kings and even queens. While these ancient Aribi
for the most part constituted nomadic tribes, certain of their
descendants became settled and achieved a high culture. Thus, about
B.C. 200 we hear of the realm of the Nabataeans in the former
territory of the Edomites. From their cliff-town of Petra they
gradually spread their dominion over North-western Arabia, Moab, the
Hauran, and temporarily even over Damascus. Their prosperity was
chiefly due to their carrying trade between Southern Arabia and
Mediterranean lands. The language of their inscriptions and coins is
Aramaic, but the names inscribed upon them are Arabic. In A.D. 106
the Nabataean Kingdom became a Roman province. Its annexation caused
the prosperity of the above-mentioned Palmyra, whose aristocracy and
dynasty were likewise descended from the Aribi. Subsequent to these
many other small Arabian principalities developed on the boundary
between civilized lands and the desert; but they were for the most
part of short duration. Of greatest importance were two which stood
respectively under the protection of the Byzantine Empire and the
Persian Kingdom as buffer states of those great powers against the
sons of the desert: the realm of the Ghassanites in the Hauran, and
that of the Lahmites, the centre of which was Hira, to the south of
Babylon.
In the second half of the sixth century A.D., when Southern Arabia
had outlived its political existence, Northern Arabia had not yet
found a way to political union, and the entire peninsula threatened
to become a battle-ground of Persian and Byzantine interests. In one
district alone, the centre of which was Mecca, did pure Arabism
maintain an independent position. In this City, A.D. 570, Mohammed
was born, the man who was destined to put into motion the last and
most permanent of the movements which issued from Arabia. And so in
the seventh century another evolution of Semitism took place, which
in the victorious power of its attack and in its mighty expansion
surpassed all that had gone before; the offshoots of which pressed
forward to the Atlantic Ocean and into Europe itself.
B. Abyssinians
At an early epoch South Arabian tribes emigrated to the opposite
African coast, where Sabaean trade colonies had probably existed for
a long time. As early as the first century A.D. we find in the north
of the Abyssinian mountain — lands the Semitic realm of Aksum. The
conquerors brought with them South Arabian letters and language,
which in their new home gradually attained an individual character.
>From this language, the Ge'ez, wrongly called Ethiopian, two daughter-
languages are descended, Tigré and Tigriña. The confusion of this
kingdom with Ethiopia probably owes its origin to the fact that the
Semite emigrants adopted this name from the Graeco-Egyptian sailors,
at a time when the Kingdom of Meroë was still in some repute. And so
they called their kingdom Yteyopeya. From Aksum as a base they
gradually extended their dominion over all Abyssinia, the northern
population of which today shows a purer Semitic type, while the
southern is strongly mixed with Hamitic elements. At an early date
the south must have been settled by Semites, who spoke a language
related to Ge'ez, which was afterwards to a great extent influenced
by the languages of the native population, particularly by the Agau
dialects. A descendant of this language is the Amharic, the present
language of intercourse in Abyssinia itself and far beyond its
boundaries.
See the articles on the separate titles treated above; also MASPERO,
Histoire ancienne, des peuples de l'Orient classique (1895); MEYER,
Gesch. des Altertums, I (1909), extending to the sixteenth century
B.C.; BARTON, Sketch of Semitic Origins (New York, 1902).
F. SCHÜHLEIN
Transcribed by Jeffrey L. Anderson
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XIII
Copyright © 1912 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, February 1, 1912. Remy Lafort, D.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York

End<{{
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