Semitic - Semitic-speaking Peoples

Semitic-speaking Peoples

The following is a list of ancient and modern Semitic speaking peoples.

  • Mandaeans
  • Akkadians (Assyrians/Babylonians) — migrated into Mesopotamia in the 4th millennium BC and amalgamate with non-Semitic Mesopotamian (Sumerian) populations into the Assyrians and Babylonians of the Late Bronze Age. The remnants of these people became the modern Assyrian Christians.
  • Eblaites — 23rd century BC
  • Chaldeans — appeared in southern Mesopotamia circa 1000 BC
  • Aramaeans — 16th to 8th century BC / Akhlames (Ahlamu) 14th century BC The modern Syriac Christian population of Syria are largely of Aramean stock.
  • Mhallami
  • Ugarites, 14th to 12th centuries BC
  • Suteans - 14th Century BC
  • Canaanite language speaking nations of the early Iron Age:
    • Amorites — 20th century BC
    • Ammonites
    • Edomites
    • Amalekites
    • Hebrews/Israelites — founded the nation of Israel which later split into the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah. The remnants of these people became the Jews and the Samaritans.
    • Moabites
    • Phoenicians — founded Mediterranean colonies including Carthage. The remnants of these people became the modern Maronites.
  • Old South Arabian speaking peoples
    • Sabaeans of Yemen — 9th to 1st c. BC
  • Shebans
  • Ubarites
  • Maganites
  • Ethio-Semitic speaking peoples
    • Aksumites — 4th c. BC to 7th c. AD
  • Arabs, Old North Arabian speaking Bedouins
    • Gindibu's Arabs 9th c. BC
    • Qadar tribe 7th century BC
    • Lihyanites — 6th to 1st c. BC
    • Thamud people — 2nd to 5th c. AD
    • Ghassanids — 3rd to 7th c. AD
  • Nabataeans — Mix of Aramaiac and Arabic speakers.
    • Maltese

Read more about this topic:  Semitic

Famous quotes containing the word peoples:

    I have been amazed by the Anglo-Saxon’s lack of curiosity about the internal lives and emotions of the Negroes, and for that matter, any non-Anglo-Saxon peoples within our borders, above the class of unskilled labor.
    Zora Neale Hurston (1891–1960)