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Edom (/'i?d?m/ [1] or /'i?.d?m/;[2] Hebrew: ???????

, Modern 'Edom Tiberian 'Ed'hom,


, lit.: "red"; Assyrian: Udumi; Syriac: ????) was an ancient kingdom in Transjordan
located between Moab to the northeast, the Arabah to the west and the Arabian
Desert to the south and east.[3] Most of its former territory is now divided
between Israel and Jordan. Edom appears in written sources relating to the late
Bronze Age and to the Iron Age in the Levant, such as the Hebrew Bible and Egyptian
and Mesopotamian records. In classical antiquity, the cognate name Idumea was used
for a smaller area in the same general region.

Edom and Idumea are two related but distinct terms relating to a historically-
contiguous population but two separate, if adjacent, territories that were occupied
at different periods of their history by the Edomites/Idumeans. The Edomites first
established a kingdom ("Edom") in the southern area of modern Jordan and later
migrated into southern parts of the Kingdom of Judah ("Idumea", or modern southern
Israel/Negev) when Judah was first weakened and then destroyed by the Babylonians,
in the 6th century BC.

Edom is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible but also in a list of the Egyptian pharaoh
Seti I from c. 1215 BC and in the chronicle of a campaign by Ramses III (r.
1186�1155 BC).[3] The Edomites, who have been identified archaeologically, were a
Semitic people who probably arrived in the region around the 14th century BC.[3]
Archaeological investigation showed that the country flourished between the 13th
and the 8th century BC and was destroyed after a period of decline in the 6th
century BC by the Babylonians.[3] After the loss of the kingdom, the Edomites were
pushed westward towards southern Judah by nomadic tribes coming from the east;
among them were the Nabateans, who first appeared in the historical annals of the
4th century BC and already established their own kingdom in what used to be Edom,
by the first half of the 2nd century BC.[3] More recent excavations show that the
process of Edomite settlement in the southern parts of the Kingdom of Judah and
parts of the Negev desert down to Timna had started already before the destruction
of the kingdom by Nebuchadnezzar II in 587/86 BCE, both by peaceful penetration and
by military means and taking advantage of the already-weakened state of Judah.[4]
[5]

Once pushed out of their territory, the Edomites settled during the Persian period
in an area comprising the southern hills of Judea down to the area north of Be'er
Sheva.[6] The people appear under a Greek form of their old name, as Idumeans or
Idumaeans, and their new territory was called Idumea or Idumaea (Greek: ?d??�a?a,
Idouma�a; Latin: Idumaea), a term that was used in New Testament times.[7][8]

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