Thursday, August 25, 2022

 

Going Back to a William Robinson and Elizabeth Norton To Reverend Edward Robinson of Palestine

 Nadene Goldfoot                                        

      Palestine Biblical Scholar, Edward Robinson, Reverend

My, everyone back then seemed to be a Reverend.  I had found Reverend Edward Robinson born in 1794 in Connecticut who was THE Edward Robinson in Palestine with a Smith, doing research and probably digs.  His father was William Robinson, Reverend.  Every Robinson named a son, William or Edward. My mother's brother was Edward Kenneth Robinson.   This Reverend was already on my vast Robinson tree-almost, as his father was there, since I've tried so many Robinsons to be the father of my ggrandfather, Abiathar Smith Robinson of Vermont b:Dec. 1829.

You'd think my ggrandfather, Abiathar was raised by a Reverend.  He was very strict.  My grandfather Frank Hugh's horse was in a field where the bull had entered on a Sunday, their Sabbath, and Frank wanted to get it out quickly to save it from the bull.  Abiathar wouldn't let him, the horse was killed, and so my granddfather left home--ran away, actually at about age 16, never to return, and there went all my chances of getting some good information about the family.  New England was loaded with Robinsons.  New York, CT, Vermont, Maine, 

Edward Robinson (April 10, 1794 – January 27, 1863) was an American biblical scholar known for his magnum opus, Biblical Researches in Palestine, the first major work in Biblical Geography and Biblical Archaeology, which earned him the epithets "Father of Biblical Geography" and "Founder of Modern Palestinology."[1]

He studied in the United States and Germany, a center of biblical scholarship and exploration of the Bible as history. He translated scriptural works from classical languages, as well as German translations. His Greek and English Lexicon of the New Testament (1836; last revision, 1850) became a standard authority in the United States, and was reprinted several times in Great Britain.

Robinson went to Europe to study ancient languages, largely in Halle and Berlin (1826–30). While in Halle, in 1828 he married the German writer Therese Albertine Luise. After the couple returned to the United States, Robinson was appointed professor extraordinary of sacred literature at Andover Theological Seminary (1830–.1833).     I've seen a picture of her, can't lift it to this blog.  She was beautiful, while he

looks rather stuffy.  

It will be wild if he's a DNA relative since I'm holding dual citizenship with USA/Israel having lived there from  1980-end of 1985 in Haifa and Tzfat.  

Robinson traveled to Palestine in 1838 in the company of Rev. Eli Smith. He published Biblical Researches in Palestine in 1841, for which he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society in 1842. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1847.

                  

Robinson, together with Smith, made scores of identifications of ancient places referred to the Bible. His work established his enduring reputation as a "Founder" of Biblical archaeology, and influenced much of future archaeological field work. Examples of his finds in Jerusalem include the Siloam tunnel and Robinson's Arch in the Old City; the latter was named in his honor. 

 The arch is named after Biblical scholar Edward Robinson who identified its remnants in 1838. Robinson published his findings in his landmark work Biblical Researches in Palestine, in which he drew the connection with a bridge described in Josephus's Antiquities of the Jews and The Jewish War, concluding that its existence proves the antiquity of the Walls of Jerusalem. Excavations during the second half of the 20th century revealed both its purpose and the extent of its associated structures. Today the considerable surviving portions of the ancient overpass complex may be viewed by the public within the Jerusalem Archaeological Park. As it is adjacent to Jerusalem's Western Wall worship area, a portion is used by some groups as a place of prayer.      

These stones next to the Kotel, the Western Wall, at Robinson’s Arch, are from the ruined Temple, and remain as a reminder.

The two men returned to Ottoman Palestine in 1852 for further investigations. In 1856 the enlarged edition of Biblical Researches was published simultaneously in English and German. Among those who later acknowledged Robinson’s stature, in 1941 G. Ernest Wright, reviewing the pioneering survey contained in Nelson Glueck's The Other Side of the Jordan, makes a just comparison and fitting testimonial: "Glueck's explorations are second to none, unless it is those of Edward Robinson."

Walking underground to Robinson's Arch.  

[1] William Robinson, Reverend b: August 15, 1754 in Lebanon, New London, Conncticut d: August 15, 1825 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut Age at death: 71

. +Sophia Mosely b: October 07, 1760 in Westfield, Middlesex, Connecticut d: December 31, 1784 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut Age at death: 24

*2nd Wife of [1] William Robinson, Reverend:

. +Anna Mills b: June 11, 1761 in West Simsbury, Hartford, Connecticut d: July 10, 1789 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut Age at death: 28

*3rd Wife of [1] William Robinson, Reverend:

. +Naomi Wolcott b: September 28, 1754 in East Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut d: April 16, 1782 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut m: Abt. 1772 in prob.Lebanon/  Southington, Hartford, Connecticut Age at death: 27 m: Abt. 1772 in prob.Lebanon/  Southington, Hartford, Connecticut

*4th Wife of [1] William Robinson, Reverend:

. +Elizabeth Betsey Norton b: January 13, 1761 in Farmington, Hartford, Connecticut d: December 20, 1824 in prob. Southington, Hartford, Connecticut m: August 10, 1790 in Connecticut Age at death: 63 m: August 10, 1790 in Connecticut

The line went to Ichabod Robinson, William's father.  

Descendants of Ichabod Robinson

[1] Ichabod Robinson b: December 12, 1720 in Duxbury, Massachusetts d: January 20, 1809 in Lebanon, New London, Conncticut Age at death: 88

. +Lydia Brown b: Abt. 1720

*2nd Wife of [1] Ichabod Robinson:

. +Mary

*3rd Wife of [1] Ichabod Robinson:

. +Mary Hide Hyde b: July 03, 1731 in Lebanon, New London, Conncticut d: July 01, 1750 in Lebanon, New London, Conncticut m: May 25, 1749 in Lebanon, New London, Connecticut Age at death: 18 m: May 25, 1749 in Lebanon, New London, Connecticut

*4th Wife of [1] Ichabod Robinson:

. +Lydia Brown b: March 19, 1719/20 d: August 23, 1778 in Lebanon, New London, Conncticut m: January 16, 1752 in Lebanon, New London, Connecticut Age at death: 58 m: January 16, 1752 in Lebanon, New London, Connecticut

Resource
https://wwwrobinsongenealogy.blogspot.com/2019/07/palestine-who-lived-there-edward.html

Labels: , , , , , , ,


Saturday, July 27, 2019

 

Palestine? Who Lived There? Edward Robinson Can Tell You Who


Friday, October 31, 2014


Nadene Goldfoot                                                                     

Edward Robinson (b: April 10, 1794 in Southington, Connecticut d: January 27, 1863 in New York City)  was an American biblical scholar. He studied in the United States and Germany, a center of biblical scholarship and exploration of the Bible as history..


Descendants of father of EDWARD ROBINSON, Reverend, Archaeologist
[1] William Robinson, Reverend b: August 15, 1754 in Lebanon, New London, Conncticut d: August 15, 1825 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
.. +Naomi Wolcott b: February 08, 1780 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
*2nd Wife of [1] William Robinson, Reverend:
.. +Sophia Mosely b: September 16, 1783 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
*3rd Wife of [1] William Robinson, Reverend:
.. +Anna Mills b: August 13, 1787 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
*4th Wife of [1] William Robinson, Reverend:
.. +Elizabeth Norton b: 1761 d: 1824 in prob. Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
. EDWARD ROBINSON, Reverend, Archaeologist b: April 10, 1794 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut d: January 27, 1863 in Manhattan, New York
..... +Therese Albertine Adolfus Luise Von Jacob b: January 26, 1797 in Halle (Saale) , Germany d: April 13, 1869 in Hamburg, Mitte, Germany
..... Edward Robinson, Jr. b: 1836 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts d: February 14, 1894 in 367 W. 56th St, Manhattan, New York
......... +Emma M. Unknown b: Abt. 1836 d: November 08, 1885
......... Therrese Marie Robinson b: 1879 d: July 01, 1879


"The son of a Congregational minister, Robinson was born in Connecticut. (A Congregational church "are Protestant churches in the Reformed tradition practicing congregationalist church governance, in which each congregation independently and autonomously runs its own affairs." ) After graduating from Hamilton College in 1816, he became a professor of biblical literature at Andover Theological Seminary in Massachusetts and later, Union Theological Seminary. He studied abroad in Germany and Palestine, was an expert in classical Greek, and eventually mastered Hebrew.

 One of the great biblical scholars of his era, Robinson published several volumes that were based on careful personal exploration of ancient biblical sites. Armed with a compass, a telescope, and a Bible, he made several important identifications of landmarks, and his writings had a significant impact on modern archeology.

Probably his two most important finds were Hezekiah’s Tunnel, and the Arch at the southwestern wall in Jerusalem that is named after him today. Robinson's Arch is a masonry stub about 50 feet long that projects out of the face of the Western Wall, just south of the Wailing Wall, in a semi-enclosed area filled with rubble from the Roman destruction in 70 A.D. It was the support for a massive staircase that led up from shops and markets on the street level to a gate at the Temple Mount." 

It was this American biblical scholar and archaeologist,  Edward Robinson in 1838, who announced that hundreds of place names of villages and sites in Palestine, who they thought were Arab names, were found to be Arabic renderings of translations of ancient Hebrew names, biblical  or Talmudic. Edward, born in Connecticut, though he was raised on a farm, attended Hamilton college in Clinton, NY and graduated.  He not only studied Hebrew but aided Moses Stuart in preparing his 2nd edition in 1823 of his Hebrew Grammar and translated it into English in 1825.  He became Professor Extraordinary of sacred literature at Andover Theological Seminary in 1830-33.    He was born on April 10, 1794 and died on January 27, 1863 in Brooklyn, New York, and was not from the Jewish Robinsons.  He's called Father of Biblical Geography and the Founder of Modern Paleontology due to the work he achieved.

Robinson had traveled to Palestine in 1838 with Reverend Eli Smith which led to the publication of biblical Researches in Palestine in 1841.  Imagine what it must have been like.  This was 29 years before Mark Twain's famous visit found in his book, " The Innocents Abroad."He was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society in 1842.  Robinson, together with Smith, made scores of identifications of ancient places and the work created his enduring reputation as a Founder by setting the compass of future archaeological field work.  Examples from Jerusalem include the Hezekiah tunnel, and Robinson's Arch in the Old city, named for him.
                                  

In Jerusalem, one can find Robinson's arch on the south-western flank of the Temple Mount,which  once supported a staircase which led to the Temple.

The Arabs have never even had a name of their own for this country which they claim.  Filastin is the Arab transliteration of Palestine, the name Romans gave the country after 135 CE and their fight with General Bar Kokhba of the Jews who kept them on the offense for 3 years in trying to retake Jerusalem.  Romans had used this name thinking to obliterate the presence of the Jewish people with it, the name of their biggest adversary.

Today they've even found that some Arabs who are living with such names over their doorposts are long lost Jews who had been forcefully converted to Islam. 

                                                                    
                                         Jerusalem, City of David

The truth of the matter is that there was never a Palestinian Arab nation.  Those who had lived in Palestine within the Ottoman Empire found it a good place to plunder and destroy.  There were only a few who lived within its boundaries and may have had a liking for their village while they made war on the next one.  They lived in clans which fought for the right of local tax-gathering, or even for their town.  They were not conscious of any relationship to the land of Palestine.  If they knew of it as a land, they learned this from the Jews and their stories of living here for so many long years.

Palestine is mentioned only once in the Koran as the "Holy Land"--holy, that is to Jews and Christians; not to the Muslims.  This is why Jews and Christians were referred to as "people of the book."

People visiting the Holy Land in the 19th century felt that the country had been waiting for the return of its lawful inhabitants as it was in dire condition, mostly of weeds, swamps and desert inhabited by mosquitoes.  This attitude was significant compared to the Arabs living in the land.  In 1200 years they had lived here of which 400 were under the Ottomans, they had built only a single town, Ramleh, built as the local subprovincial capital in the 8th century.

In the 10th century, Arab writer Ibn Hukal wrote: "Nobody cares about building the country, or concerns himself for its needs."  This was showing the ruination of a country treated like this for hundreds of years.  The handful of Arabs who lived there were downtrodden subjects of a disinterested ruler.  The remote authority in Constantinople took their sons for soldiers and the local tax farmer sucked them dry.  The village over the hill and the rival tribe had to be guarded against or fought in a cycle of mutually destructive getting even for a past strike.  The Bedouin nomads tore up their olive trees, destroyed their crops, filled their wells with stones, broke down their cisterns, took away their livestock, but were sometimes useful as allies to help fight the next village.

Such was Palestine welcoming in tourists to see a treeless waste with a sprinkling of emaciated towns, malaria-ridden swamps in its once-fertile northern valleys, and the once thriving South Negev  that had turned into a desert, with a population in Palestine that had dwindled to almost nothing.  Neither Arab nor Jew were in enough numbers to turn all this around and fight the carousing marauders on their camels. 

                                                                  
And then came in the reinforcements--for the Jews--the First Aliyah in 1881.  .
                                                                                
Edward Robinson, (William, Ichabod, John, Samuel, William, John Robinson, whose line I've traced back to  John Robinson b: 1588 in Barton St. David, Somerset, England and who died in 1693, is my half 4th cousin 6 times removed from my mother's side of the family, the Robinsons.  That is, if I didn't get too mixed up in all the Robinsons of New England, he's on my tree.  You see, my mother converted to Judaism when she married my Jewish father. Her maiden name was Robinson.   Coincidentally, my mother's brother was Kenneth Edward Robinson, and their grandfather was Abiathar Smith Robinson.  There's a Robinson-Smith connection if I ever saw one!   Here I am, Jewish and holder of dual citizenship with Israel and the USA. 

Resource: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Aliyah
https://wwwrobinsongenealogy.blogspot.com/2022/08/going-back-to-william-robinson-and.html
Battleground, fact and fantasy in Palestine by Samuel Katz, p. 114
Update: http://jewishfactsfromportland.blogspot.com/2012/07/palestine-that-unwanted-backwater-that.html
  mentioning Robinson and Smith in Palestine and their findings. 

Labels: , , , , , , , ,


This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?