- Tribe of Menasheh
The Tribe of Menasheh (Hebrew Name|מְנַשֶּׁה|Mənašše|Mənaššeh|"who makes to forget") was one of the Tribes of Israel. Together with the
Tribe of Ephraim , Menasheh also formed the "House of Joseph ". At its height, the territory it occupied spanned theJordan River , forming two "half-tribes", one on each side; the eastern half-tribe was almost entirely discontinuous with the western half-tribe, only slightly touching at one corner - the south west of the eastern half-tribe and north east of the western half-tribe.The western half-tribe occupied the land to the immediate north of Ephraim, in the centre of western
Canaan , between the Jordan and the coast, with theTribe of Issachar to the north, the north west corner being atMount Carmel ; the eastern half-tribe was the northernmost Israelite group on the east of the Jordan, occupying the land north of thetribe of Gad , extending from theMahanaim in the south toMount Hermon in the north, and including within it the whole ofBashan . These territories abounded in water, a precious commodity inCanaan , and thus constituted one of the most valuable parts of the country; additionally, Menasheh's geographic situation enabled it to defend two important mountain passes -Esdraelon on the west of the Jordan andHauran on the east.In the Torah
According to the Torah, the tribe was founded by an individual,
Menasheh , a son of Joseph, from whom it took its name. [Genesis 30] Some Biblical scholars, however, view this as a postdiction, aneponym ousmetaphor providing anaetiology of the connectedness of the tribe to others in the Israelite confederation ["Peake's commentary on the Bible ".] In the Biblical account, Joseph is one of the two children ofRachel andJacob , a brother toBenjamin , and father to both Ephraim, and his first son, Menasheh; Ephraim received the blessing of the firstborn, although Menasheh was the eldest, because Jacob foresaw that Ephraim's descendants would be greater than his brother's.Though the biblical descriptions of the geographic boundary of the House of Joseph are fairly consistent, the descriptions of the boundaries between Menasheh and Ephraim are not, and each is portrayed as having
exclave s within the territory of the other. ["Jewish Encyclopedia".] Furthermore, in theBlessing of Jacob , and elsewhere ascribed by textual scholars to a similar or earlier time period, (eg., Joshua 17:14-18) Ephraim and Menasheh are treated as a single tribe, with "Joseph" appearing in their place. From this it is regarded as obvious that originally Ephraim and Menasheh were considered one tribe - that of "Joseph". ["Jewish Encyclopedia"]Fate
As part of the
Kingdom of Israel , the territory of Menasheh was conquered by theAssyrians , and the tribe exiled; the manner of their exile lead to their further history being lost. However, several modern day groups claim descent, with varying levels of academic and rabbinical support. TheSamaritan s claims that some of their adherents are descended from this tribe. Further afield, innortheast India , theKuki-Chin-Mizo Jews claim descent from Menasheh, and call themselves "Bnei Menashe "; in2005 Shlomo Amar ,Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Israel, announced that he regarded this claim to be true, which under the controversialLaw of Return allows them to migrate toIsrael , as long as they formally convert to Israel's official form ofJudaism .Several western Christian and related groups claim that part of this tribe settled in America. The most significant of these claims was made by
Joseph Smith . He claimed that a Prophet descendant of Manasseh named Lehi settled in America after the destruction of Jerusalem in about 600 BC. Many Latin American members ofThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormons") believe themselves to be descended from Manasseh in a literal sense and others (in a "grafted in" sense of ancestry), arguing that the lost tribes are being "restored" in the "latter days" (meaning "now") as prophesied byIsaiah ; some believe that this would be the fulfillment of part of theBlessing of Jacob , where it states that "Joseph is a fruitful bough, even a fruitful bough by a well; whose branches run over the wall" [King James translation, Genesis 49:22] with the interpretation that the "wall" is the "ocean". Some adherents ofMessianic Judaism also regard themselves as part of Manasseh on the basis that, regardless of any genetic connection which may or may not exist, they observe theTorah and interpret parts of theTanakh in certain ways.According to Biblical criticism
Although "Machir" and "Gilead", as individuals, are described in biblical genealogies as father and son, and as son and grandson of Manasseh, in the view of some critical scholars "Machir" and "Gilead" are treated as the names of tribes which are different from one another in the Song of Deborah. (Tradition regards these as region names with the region Gilead being named so, long before the grandson of Manasseh.) and Additionally, Manasseh is absent from the poem; in the Elohist and Jahwist texts Manasseh is also frequently absent, while "Machir" is mentioned. Additionally Machir is described as settling on the east of the Jordan, leaving the absence of the western half of Menasheh in these passages still unaccounted for. Critical scholars argue that the two halfs had different origins noting that in the
Book of Chronicles that the western "half tribe" and eastern "half tribe" historically had separate tribal rulers. [1 Chronicles 27:20-21]ee also
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Manasseh
*Joseph
*House of Joseph
*Two House Movement
*Tribe of Ephraim References
*eastonsExternal links
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