Generations of Noah
The Generations of Noah or Table of Nations (Genesis 10 of the Hebrew Bible) is a
traditional ethnology representing the
expansion of humankind from the descendants of Noah and
their dispersion into many lands after the Flood. The
term "nations" to describe the descendants is a standard English
translation of the Hebrew word "goy",
following the c.400
CE Latin Vulgate's
"nationes" / "nationibus", and does not have the same
political connotations that the word entails today.
The
list of 70 names introduces for the first time a number of well known ethnonyms and toponyms important to
biblical geography such
as Noah's three sons Shem, Ham and Japheth, from which
is derived Semitic, Hamitic and Japhetites, certain
of Noah's grandsons including Elam, Ashur, Aram, Cush, and Canaan,
from which the Elamites, Assyrians, Arameans, Cushites and Canaanites, as well
as further descendants including Eber (from
which "Hebrews"), the
hunter-king Nimrod, the Philistines and the sons of
Canaan including Heth, Jebus and
Amorus, from which Hittites, Jebusites and Amorites.
As
Christianity took over the Roman world, it adopted the idea that all the
world's peoples were descended from Noah. But the tradition of Hellenistic
Jewish identifications of the ancestry of various peoples, which concentrates
very much on the Mediterranean world and the Near East and is described below,
became stretched. Northern peoples important to the Late Roman and medieval
world, such as the Celts, Slavs, Germans and Norsemen were not covered,
nor were others of the world's peoples. A variety of arrangements were devised
by scholars, with for example the Scythians, who do
feature in the tradition, being claimed as the ancestors of much of northern
Europe.
According
to Joseph
Blenkinsopp, the 70 names in the list express
symbolically the unity of the human race, corresponding to the 70 descendants
of Israel who go down into Egypt with Jacob at Genesis 46:27 and the 70 elders
of Israel who visit God with Moses at the covenant ceremony in Exodus 24:1–9.
Table of Nations
Book of Genesis
Noah dividing the world between his sons. Anonymous
painter; Russia, 18th century
Chapters
1–11 of the Book of Genesis are structured
around five toledot statements
("these are the generations of..."), of which the "generations
of the sons of Noah, Shem, Ham, and Japheth," is the fourth. Events before
the Genesis flood narrative, the central toledoth,
correspond to those after: the post-Flood world is a new creation corresponding
to the Genesis creation narrative, and like Adam, Noah has three sons who will populate
the world. The correspondences extend forward as well: there are 70 names in
the Table, corresponding to the 70 Israelites who go down into Egypt at the end
of Genesis and to the 70 elders of Israel who go up the mountain with Sinai to
meet with God in Exodus. The symbolic force of these numbers is underscored by
the way the names are frequently arranged in groups of seven, suggesting that
the Table is a symbolic means of implying universal moral obligation.
The
overall structure of the Table is:
·
1. Introductory
formula, v.1
·
2. Japheth, vv.2–5
·
3. Ham, vv.6–20
·
4. Shem, 21–31
·
5. Concluding
formula, v.32.
The
overall principle governing the assignment of various peoples within the Table
is difficult to discern: it purports to describe all humankind, but restricts
itself to the Egyptian lands of the south, the Mesopotamian lands, and Anatolia
and the Ionian Greeks, and the "sons of Noah" are not organised by
geography, language or ethnic groups within these regions. The Table is in
fact filled with difficulties: for example, the names Sheba and Havilah are
listed twice, first as descendants of Cush the son of Ham (verse 7), and then
as sons of Joktan, the great-grandsons of Shem, and while the Cushites are
African in verses 6–7 they are Mesopotamians in verses 10–14.
The
date of composition of Genesis 1–11 cannot be fixed with any precision,
although it seems likely that an early brief nucleus was later expanded with
extra data. Portions
of the Table itself may derive from the 10th century, while others reflect the
7th century and priestly revisions in the
5th century. Its
combination of world review, myth and genealogy corresponds to the work of the
Greek historian Hecataeus
of Miletus, active c.520 BCE.
Book of Chronicles
I
Chronicles 1 includes a version of the Table of Nations from Genesis, but
edited to make clearer that the intention is to establish the background for
Israel. This is done by condensing various branches to focus on the story of
Abraham and his offspring. Most notably, it omits Genesis 10:9–14, in which
Nimrod, a son of Cush, is linked to various cities in Mesopotamia, thus
removing from Cush any Mesopotamian connection.
Book of Jubilees
The
Table of Nations is expanded upon in detail in chapters 8–9 of the Book of Jubilees,
sometimes known as the "Lesser Genesis," a work from the early Second
Temple period. Jubilees is considered Pseudepigraphical by most Christian
and Jewish sects but thought to have been held in regard by many of the Church Fathers. Its division of the
descendants throughout the world are thought to have been heavily influenced by
the "Ionian world map" described in the Histories (Herodotus), and the anomalous
treatment of Canaan and Madai are thought to have been "propaganda for the
territorial expansion of the Hasmonean state".
Septuagint version
The
Hebrew bible was translated into Greek in Alexandria at the request of Ptolemy
II, who reigned over Egypt 285–246 BCE. Its
version of the Table of Nations is substantially the same as that in the Hebrew
text, but with the following differences:
·
It lists Elisa as
an extra son of Japheth, giving him eight instead of seven, while continuing to
list him also as a son of Javan, as in the Masoretic text.
·
Whereas the Hebrew
text lists Shelah as the son of Arpachshad in the line of Shem, the Septuagint
has a Cainan as the son of
Arpachshad and father of Shelah – the Book of Jubilees gives considerable scope
to this figure. Cainan appears again at the end of the list of the sons of
Shem.
·
Obal, Joktan's
eighth son in the Masoretic text, does not appear.
Sons of Noah: Shem, Ham and Japheth
1823 map by Robert Wilkinson (see also 1797
version here). Prior to the mid-19th century, Shem was
associated with all of Asia, Ham with all of Africa and Japheth with all of
Europe.
The Flood story tells
how Noah and his three sons Shem, Ham, and Japheth, together with their wives,
were saved from the Deluge to repopulate the Earth.
·
Shem's name means "name" or
"fame". Through Eber he became the ancestor of Abraham and thus of the
Israelites. In
the view of some 17th-century European scholars (e.g., John Webb), the people of China, eastern Persia and
"the Indias" descended from Shem. Both Webb and the
French Jesuits belonging to the Figurist school (late
17th-early 18th century) went even further, identifying the legendary Emperor Yao of Chinese history
with Noah himself.
·
Ham is the forefather
of Cush, Egypt, and Put, and of Canaan, whose lands include portions of Africa,
Arabia, Syria-Palestine and Mesopotamia. The etymology of his name is
uncertain; some scholars have linked it to terms connected with divinity, but a
divine or semi-divine status for Ham is unlikely.
·
Japheth is apparently the
youngest son, although his line is given first. His name is
associated with the mythological Greek Titan Iapetos, and his sons include
Javan, the Greek-speaking cities of Ionia. In
Genesis 9:27 it forms a pun with the Hebrew root ypt:
"May God make room [the hiphil of the yph root]
for Japheth, that he may live in Shem's tents and Canaan may be his
slave."
Ethnological interpretations
In Flavius Josephus
The
1st-century Jewish-Roman historian Josephus, in Antiquities of the Jews Book 1, chapter 6,
was among the first of many who attempted to assign known ethnicities to some
of the names listed in Genesis chapter 10. His assignments became the basis for
most later authors, and were as follows:
·
Gomer: "those
whom the Greeks now call Galatians, [Galls,]
but were then called Gomerites".
·
Aschanax
(Ashkenaz): "Aschanaxians, who are now called by the Greeks
Rheginians".
·
Riphath:
"Ripheans, now called Paphlagonians".
·
Thrugramma
(Togarmah): "Thrugrammeans, who, as the Greeks resolved, were named Phrygians".
·
Magog:
"Magogites, but who are by the Greeks called Scythians".
·
Madai: "the
Madeans, who are called Medes, by the Greeks".
·
Javan: "Ionia,
and all the Grecians".
·
Elisa:
"Eliseans... they are now the Aeolians".
·
Tharsus (Tarshish):
"Tharsians, for so was Cilicia of old
called". He also derives the name of their city Tarsus from Tharsus.
·
Cethimus (Kittim):
"The island Cethima: it is now called Cyprus". He
also derives the Greek name of their city, which he spells Citius,
from Cethimus.
·
Thobel (Tubal):
"Thobelites, who are now called Iberes".
·
Mosoch (Meshech):
"Mosocheni... now they are Cappadocians."
He also derives the name of their capital Mazaca from Mosoch.
·
Thiras (Tiras):
"Thirasians; but the Greeks changed the name into Thracians".
·
Chus (Cush):
"Ethiopians... even at this day, both by themselves and by all men in
Asia, called Chusites".
·
Sabas (Seba):
Sabeans
·
Evilas (Havilah):
"Evileans, who are called Getuli".
·
Sabathes (Sabta):
"Sabathens, they are now called by the Greeks Astaborans".
·
Sabactas (Sabteca):
Sabactens
·
Ragmus (Raamah):
Ragmeans
·
Judadas (Dedan):
"Judadeans, a nation of the western Ethiopians".
·
Sabas (Sheba):
Sabeans
·
Mesraim (Misraim): Egypt, which he says is called Mestre in his country.
·
"Now all the
children of Mesraim, being eight in number, possessed the country from Gaza to
Egypt, though it retained the name of one only, the Philistim; for the Greeks
call part of that country Palestine.
As for the rest, Ludieim, and Enemim, and Labim, who alone inhabited in Libya, and
called the country from himself, Nedim, and Phethrosim, and Chesloim, and
Cephthorim, we know nothing of them besides their names; for the Ethiopic war
which we shall describe hereafter, was the cause that those cities were
overthrown."
·
Phut: Libya. He states that a river and region
"in the country of Moors" was still called Phut by the Greeks, but
that it had been renamed "from one of the sons of Mesraim, who was called
Lybyos".
·
Canaan: Judea, which he called "from his own name
Canaan".
·
Sidonius (Sidon):
The city of Sidonius, "called by the Greeks Sidon".
·
Amathus
(Hamathite): "Amathine, which is even now called Amathe by the inhabitants,
although the Macedonians named it Epiphania, from one of his posterity."
·
Arudeus (Arvadite):
"the island Aradus".
·
Arucas (Arkite):
"Arce, which is in Libanus".
·
"But for the
seven others [sons of Canaan], Chetteus, Jebuseus, Amorreus, Gergesus, Eudeus,
Sineus, Samareus, we have nothing in the sacred books but their names, for the
Hebrews overthrew their cities".
·
Elam: "Elamites, the
ancestors of the Persians".
·
Ashur: "Assyrians, and their
city Niniveh built by Ashur.
·
Arphaxad:
"Arphaxadites, who are now called Chaldeans".
·
Sala
·
Heber (Eber):
"from whom they originally called the Jews Hebrews".
·
Phaleg (Peleg): He
notes that he was so named "because he was born at the dispersion of the
nations to their several countries; for Phaleg among the Hebrews
signifies division".
·
Joctan
·
"Elmodad,
Saleph, Asermoth, Jera, Adoram, Aizel, Decla, Ebal, Abimael, Sabeus, Ophir,
Euilat, and Jobab. These inhabited from Cophen, an Indian
river, and in part of Asia adjoining to it."
·
Aram:
"Aramites, which the Greeks called Syrians".
·
Uz: "Uz
founded Trachonitis and Damascus: this
country lies between Palestine and Celesyria".
·
Ul (Hul): Armenia
·
Gather (Gether): Bactrians
·
Mesa (Mesh):
"Mesaneans; it is now called Charax Spasinu".
·
Laud (Lud):
"Laudites, which are now called Lydians".
In Hippolytus
Woodcut from the Nuremberg
Chronicle, showing Shem, Ham and Japheth over their corners of the
world
Hippolytus
of Rome, in his Diamerismos (c. 234, existing
in numerous Latin and Greek copies), made
another attempt to assign ethnicities to the names in Genesis 10. It is thought
to have been based on the Book of Jubilees.
Its
differences versus that of Josephus are shown below:
·
Gomer –
Cappadocians
·
Ashkenaz –
Sarmatians
·
Riphath –
Sauromatians
·
Togarmah –
Armenians
·
Magog – Galatians, Celts
·
Javan
·
Elishah – Sicels (Chron Pasc:
Trojans and Phrygians)
·
Tarshish –
Iberians, Tyrrhenians
·
Kittim –
Macedonians, Romans, Latins
·
Tubal –
"Hettali" (?)
·
Meshech – Illyrians
·
Misraim
·
Ludim – Lydians
·
Anamim – Pamphylians
·
Pathrusim – Lycians (var.:
Cretans)
·
Caphtorim –
Cilicians
·
Put – Troglodytes
·
Canaan – Afri and
Phoenicians
·
Arkite – Tripolitanians
·
Lud – Halizones
·
Arpachshad
·
Cainan –
"those east of the Sarmatians" (one variant)
·
Joktan
·
Elmodad – Indians
·
Saleph – Bactrians
·
Hazamaveth, Sheba –
Arabs
·
Adoram – Carmanians
·
Uzal – Arians (var.: Parthians)
·
Abimael – Hyrcanians
·
Obal – Scythians
·
Ophir – Armenians
·
Deklah – Gedrosians
·
Aram –
"Etes" ?
·
Hul – Lydians (var: Colchians)
·
Gether –
"Gaspeni" ?
·
Mash – Mossynoeci (var: Mosocheni)
The Chronography
of 354, the Panarion by Epiphanius of Salamis (c. 375), the Chronicon
Paschale (c.
627), the History
of Albania by
the Georgian historian Movses Kaghankatvatsi (7th century), and
the Synopsis
of Histories by John Skylitzes (c. 1057) follow
the identifications of Hippolytus.
In Jerome
Jerome, writing c.
390, provided an 'updated' version of Josephus' identifications in his Hebrew Questions on
Genesis. His list is substantially identical to that of
Josephus in almost all respects, but with the following notable differences:
·
Thubal, son of
Japheth: "Iberians, who are
also the Spaniards from whom derive
the Celtiberians,
although certain people suppose them to be the Italians."
·
Gether, son of
Aram: "Acarnanii or Carians"
·
Mash, son of Aram: Maeones
In Isidore of Seville
and later authors
The
scholar Isidore
of Seville, in his Etymologiae (c. 600), repeats
all of Jerome's identifications, but with these minor changes:
·
Joktan, son of
Eber: Indians
·
Saleph, son of
Joktan: Bactrians
·
Magog, son of
Japheth: "Scythians and Goths"
·
Ashkenaz, son of
Gomer: "Sarmatians,
whom the Greeks call Rheginians".
Isidore's
identifications for Japheth's sons were repeated in the Historia
Brittonum attributed
to Nennius. Isidore's
identifications also became the basis for numerous later mediaeval scholars,
remaining so until the Age of Discovery prompted newer
theories, such as that of Benito
Arias Montano (1571),
who proposed connecting Meshech with Moscow, and Ophir
with Peru.
While
Genesis 10 was covered extensively by numerous Christian, Jewish and Muslim
scholars over many centuries, the phrase "Table" of nations only
appeared and became popular in English from the 1830s.
Other
interpretations: Descendants of Japheth
The oldest known map of Europe. Translation: Ecce sie
dwiseru filu noe post diluvium (Lo thus did the sons of Noah divide the world
after the Flood); Tanai. Fluv. (River Don); Nilus Fluv. (River Nile); Meotides
Paludes (Sea of Azov)
Main article: Japhetites
The
Greek Septuagint (LXX) text of
Genesis includes an additional son of Japheth, "Elisa", between Javan
and Tubal; however, as this name is found in no other ancient source, nor in I
Chronicles, he is almost universally agreed to be a duplicate of Elisha, son of
Javan. The presence of Elisa and of Cainan son of Arpachshad (below) in the
Greek Bible accounts for the traditional enumeration among early Christian
sources of 72 names, as opposed to the 70 names found in Jewish sources and
Western Christian sources.
·
Gomer: the Cimmerians, a people
from the northern Black Sea, made incursions into Anatolia in the eighth and
early seventh centuries BCE before being confined to Cappadocia.
·
Ashkenaz: A people
of the Black and Caspian sea areas, much later associated with German and East
European Jews. The Ashkuza, who lived on the upper Euphrates in Armenia expelled the
Cimmerians from their territory, and in Jeremiah 51:27 were said to march
against Babylon along with two other northern kingdoms.
·
Riphath (Diphath in Chronicles):
Josephus identification Riphath with the Paphlagonians of later antiquity,
but this appears to have been no more than a guess; the Book of Jubilees identifies the name
with the "Riphean
Mountains", equated with the Causcasus in Classical sources,
and the general understanding seems to have been invaders from the Causcuses
who were settled in Armenia or Cappadocia.
·
Togarmah: Associated
with Anatolia in Ezekiel. Later
Armenian historians claimed Togarmah as an ancestor.
·
Magog: Associated in
Ezekiel with Gog, a king of Lydia, and thereby with Anatolia. The first century
CE Jewish historian Josephus stated that Magog
was identical with the Scythians, but
modern scholars are sceptical of this and place Magog simply somewhere in
Anatolia.
·
Madai: The Medes, from an area now in northwest Iran.
·
Javan: This name is universally agreed to
refer to the Ionians (Greeks)
of the western and southern coast of Anatolia.
·
Elishah: Possibly
Elaioussa, an island off the coast of Cilicia, or an old name for the island of
Cyprus.
·
Tarshish (Tarshishah in Chronicles):
Candidates include (Tartessos)
in Spain and Tharros in Sardinia, both of which appear unlikely, and Tarsus in
Cilicia, which appears more likely despite some linguistic difficulties.
·
Kittim: Originally
the inhabitants of Kition in Cyprus, later the entire island; in the Dead Sea Scrolls the Kittim appear
to be the Romans.
·
Dodanim (Rodanim in Chronicles):
Inhabitants of Rhodes.
·
Tubal: Tubal and Meshech always appear as a
pair in the Old Testament. The
name Tubal is connected with Tabal and
Greek Tipaprivoi, a people of Cappadocia, in the
north-east of Anatolia.
·
Meshech: Mushki/Muski had its
capital at Gordium and fused with the
kingdom of Phrygia by the 8th century.
·
Tiras: Josephus and late Rabbinical writers
associated Tiras with Thrace, the part of
Europe opposite Anatolia, but all the other sons of Japheth are located in
Anatolia itself and it is possible that Tiras may refer to Thracians inhabiting
westernmost Anatolia; it has also been associated with some of the Sea Peoples such as Tursha and Tyrrhenians, but
this is considered unlikely.
Other interpretations:
Descendants of Ham
·
Cush: The biblical
transliteration of the Egyptian name for Nubia or
Ethiopia; the "sons of Cush" which follow are various locations on
the Arabian and possibly African coasts bordering the Red Sea.
·
Seba, son of Cush. Has been connected with
both Yemen and Ethiopia, with much
confusion with Sheba below.
·
Havilah, son of
Cush.
·
Sabtah, son of Cush.
·
Raamah, son of Cush.
·
Sheba, son of Raamah. Has been connected with Sabaeans and peoples on
either side of the narrowest part of the Red Sea.
·
Dedan, son of Raamah.
·
Sabtechah, son of
Cush.
·
Nimrod: Possibly
connected with Naram-Sin,
a 3rd millennium king of Akkad;in verses
10–12 he is the founder of a list of Mesopotamian cities, and the biblical
tradition elsewhere identifies him with northern Mesopotamia or Assyria. His location
(Mesopotamia) is something of an anomaly, in that the other sons of Cush are
connected with Africa or the Red Sea, and he is probably a late insertion
resulting from a confusion between the African Cush and a quite different Cush,
the eponym (ancestor) of the Kassites.
·
Mizraim: Egypt.
·
Ludim, offspring of Mizraim.
·
Anamim, offspring of
Mizraim.
·
Lehabim, offspring
of Mizraim.
·
Naphtuhim, offspring
of Mizraim.
·
Pathrusim, offspring
of Mizraim.
·
Casluhim ("out of whom
came Philistim" – Genesis 10:14, 1Chronicles 1:12)
·
Caphtorim: Probably
the island of Crete. According to Deuteronomy 2:23,
Caphtorim settled in Gaza, an important
Philistinian city.
·
Phut: the Septuagint translates this as Libyans, which would
be in accordance with the north–to–south progression in the listing of Ham's
descendants, but some scholars have suggested Punt, the Egyptian
name for Somalia.
·
Canaan:
The strip of land west of the Jordan River including modern Lebanon and parts of Syria, and the varied peoples who lived there.
·
Sidon: The main Phoenician city, often treated
as synonymous with Phoenicia.
·
Heth: Probably the
ancestor of the biblical Hittites,
although the Hittites of Anatolia had no
ethnic or linguistic ties with the peoples of Canaan.
·
"the Jebusite",
offspring of Canaan.
·
"the Amorite":
Generic name for West Semitic peoples of the Fertile Crescent.
·
"the Girgasites",
offspring of Canaan
·
"the Hivite",
offspring of Canaan
·
"the Arkite",
offspring of Canaan.
·
"the Sinite",
offspring of Canaan.
·
"the Arvadite",
offspring of Canaan.
·
"the Zemarite",
offspring of Canaan.
·
"the Hamathite",
offspring of Canaan.
Beginning
in the 9th century with the Jewish grammarian Judah ibn Quraysh, a relationship
between the Semitic and Cushitic
languages was
seen; modern linguists group these two families, along with the Egyptian, Berber, Chadic, and Omotic language groups
into the larger Afro-Asiatic language
family. In addition, languages in the southern half of Africa are now seen as
belonging to several distinct families independent of the Afro-Asiatic group.
Some now discarded Hamitic theories have
become viewed as racist; in particular a theory proposed in the 19th century by
Speke, that the Tutsi were
supposedly of some Hamitic ancestry and thus inherently superior.
The
17th-century Jesuit, Athanasius
Kircher, thought that the Chinese had also descended from Ham, via
Egyptians.
Other
interpretations: Descendants of Shem
·
Elam:
A kingdom east of Babylon and along the Persian Gulf. The Elamites called their land Haltamti and had an empire
(capital Susa) in what is now Khuzistan, modern Iran. Elamite is not a Semitic language.
·
Ashur: Assyria.
·
Arpachshad: An
obscure name of uncertain meaning, although apparently associated with northern
Mesopotamia.
·
Cainan is listed as the
son of Arpachshad and father of Shelah in the Septuagint, a Greek
translation of the Hebrew bible (the Masoretic text) made
in the last few centuries before the modern era. The name is omitted in the
Hebrew bible. The genealogy of Jesus in St. Luke 3:36, which is
taken from the Septuagint rather than the Hebrew text, include the name.
·
Salah (also
transcribed Shelah)
son of Arpachshad (or Cainan).
·
Eber son
of Shelah: The ancestor of Abraham and the Hebrews, he has a significant place
as the 14th from Adam.
·
Peleg: The name means "division,"
and may refer to the division of the peoples in the Tower of Babel incident which
follows, or to Peleg and his descendants being "divided out" as the
chosen people of God.
·
Joktan: The name is Arabic, and his 13
"sons," so far as they can be identified, correspond to the west and southwest
of the Arabian peninsula.
·
Almodad, son of
Joktan.
·
Sheleph, son of
Joktan.
·
Hazarmaveth, son of
Joktan.
·
Jerah, son of Joktan.
·
Hadoram, son of
Joktan.
·
Uzal, son of Joktan.
·
Diklah son of Joktan.
·
Obal, son of Joktan.
·
Abimael, son of
Joktan.
·
Sheba, son of Joktan.
·
Ophir, son of Joktan.
·
Havilah, son of
Joktan.
·
Jobab, son of Joktan.
·
Lud: The kingdom of Lydia in
eastern Anatolia. However,
Lydia was not Semitic and not geographically near the other "sons of
Shem", which makes its presence in the list difficult to explain.
·
Aram: Mesopotamia
and Syria.
·
Uz, son of Aram.
·
Hul, son of Aram.
·
Gether, son of Aram.
·
Mash, son of Aram (1 Chronicles has Meshech).
Extrabiblical sons of Noah
There
exist various traditions in post-biblical sources claiming that Noah had
children other than Shem, Ham, and Japheth — born variously before, during, or
after the Deluge.
According
to the Quran (Hud 42–43), Noah had
another unnamed son who refused to come aboard the Ark, instead preferring to
climb a mountain, where he drowned. Some later Islamic commentators give his
name as either Yam or Kan'an.
According
to Irish mythology, as
found in the Annals of the Four Masters and elsewhere, Noah
had another son named Bith who was not allowed
aboard the Ark, and who attempted to colonise Ireland with 54 persons, only to
be wiped out in the Deluge.
Some
9th-century manuscripts of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle assert that Sceafa was the fourth son
of Noah, born aboard the Ark, from whom the House of Wessex traced their
ancestry; in William of Malmesbury's version of this genealogy (c.
1120), Sceaf is instead made a descendant of Strephius,
the fourth son born aboard the Ark (Gesta Regnum Anglorum).
An
early Arabic work known as Kitab
al-Magall "Book
of Rolls" (part of Clementine literature) mentions Bouniter,
the fourth son of Noah, born after the flood, who allegedly invented astronomy
and instructed Nimrod. Variants
of this story with often similar names for Noah's fourth son are also found in
the c. fifth century Ge'ez work Conflict of Adam and Eve with Satan (Barvin),
the c. sixth century Syriac book Cave of Treasures (Yonton),
the seventh century Apocalypse of Pseudo-Methodius (Ionitus),
the Syriac Book of the Bee1221
(Yônatôn), the Hebrew Chronicles of Jerahmeel,
c. 12th–14th century (Jonithes), and throughout Armenian apocryphal
literature, where he is usually referred to as Maniton;
as well as in works by Petrus Comestor c. 1160 (Jonithus), Godfrey
of Viterbo 1185
(Ihonitus), Michael
the Syrian 1196
(Maniton), Abu al-Makarim c. 1208 (Abu
Naiţur); Jacob
van Maerlant c.
1270 (Jonitus), and Abraham Zacuto 1504 (Yoniko).
Martin of Opava (c. 1250), later
versions of the Mirabilia Urbis Romae,
and the Chronicon
Bohemorum of
Giovanni di Marignola (1355) make Janus (the
Roman deity) the fourth son of Noah, who moved to Italy, invented astrology, and
instructed Nimrod.
According
to the monk Annio da Viterbo (1498), the
Hellenistic Babylonian writer Berossus had mentioned 30
children born to Noah after the Deluge, including sons named Tuisto, Prometheus, Iapetus, Macrus, "16 titans", Cranus, Granaus, Oceanus, and Tipheus. Also mentioned are daughters of Noah named
Araxa "the Great", Regina, Pandora, Crana, and Thetis. However,
Annio's manuscript is widely regarded today as having been a forgery.
Islam
The
sons of Noah are not expressly mentioned in the Quran, except for the fact that
one of the sons was among the people who did not follow his own father, not
among the believers and thus was washed away in the flood. Also the Qur'an
indicates a great calamity, enough to have destroyed Noah's people, but to have
saved him his followers and his generations to come.
Source : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generations_of_Noah
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