based on
Numbers 32. The
Book of Numbers (chapter ) tells how the tribes of
Reuben and
Gad came to
Moses to ask if they could settle “beyond the Jordan”. Moses was dubious, but the two tribes promise to join in the
conquest of the land, and so Moses grants them this region to live in. The half tribe of
Manasseh are not mentioned until verse 33.
David Jobling suggests that this is because Manasseh settled in land which previously belonged to
Og, north of the
Jabbok, while Reuben and Gad settled
Sihon's land, which lay south of the Jabbok. Since Og's territory was not on the route to Canaan, it was "more naturally part of the Promised Land", and so the Manassites' status is less problematic than that of the Reubenites or Gadites. In the
Book of Joshua (),
Joshua affirms Moses' decision, and urges the men of the two and a half tribes to help in the conquest, which they are willing to do. In Joshua 22, the Transjordanian tribes return, and build a
massive altar by the Jordan. This causes the "whole congregation of the Israelites" to prepare for war, but they first send a delegation to the Transjordanian tribes, accusing them of making God angry and suggesting that their land may be unclean. In response to this, the Transjordanian tribes say that the altar is not for offerings, but is only a "witness". The western tribes are satisfied, and return home. Assis argues that the unusual dimensions of the altar suggest that it "was not meant for sacrificial use," but was, in fact, "meant to attract the attention of the other tribes" and provoke a reaction. Per the settlement of the Israelite tribes east of the Jordan, Burton MacDonald notes; There are various traditions behind the Books of Numbers, Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges, and 1 Chronicles’ assignment of tribal territories and towns to Reuben, Gad, and the half-tribe of Manasseh. Some of these traditions provide only an idealized picture of Israelite possessions east of the Jordan; others are no more than vague generalizations. Num 21.21–35, for example, says only that the land the people occupied extended from
Wadi Arnon to
Wadi Jabbok, the boundary of the Amorites. ==Status==