The Bible narrates that following the completion of the conquest of
Canaan by the
Israelite tribes,
Joshua allocated the land among the twelve tribes. According to biblical scholar Kenneth Kitchen, this conquest should be dated slightly after 1200 BCE. Some modern scholars argue that the conquest of Joshua, as described in the Book of Joshua, never occurred. "It behooves us to ask, in spite of the fact that the overwhelming consensus of modern scholarship is that Joshua is a pious fiction composed by the deuteronomistic school, how does and how has the Jewish community dealt with these foundational narratives, saturated as they are with acts of violence against others?" In the
Book of Joshua, it is claimed that at its height, the territory Manasseh occupied spanned the
Jordan River, forming two "half-tribes", one on each side; the
eastern half-tribe was, by most accounts, almost entirely
discontiguous with the western half-tribe, only slightly touching at one corner—the southwest of East Manasseh and the northeast of West Manasseh. West Manasseh occupied the land to the immediate north of Ephraim, thus just north of centre of western
Canaan, between the Jordan and the coast, with the northwest corner at
Mount Carmel, and neighbored on the north by tribes
Asher and
Issachar. East Manasseh was the northernmost Israelite group east of the Jordan until the siege of
Laish farther north by the
tribe of Dan; other neighboring tribes were
Gad on the south and
Naphtali and Issachar on the west. East Manasseh occupied the land from the
Mahanaim in the south to
Mount Hermon in the north, and including within it the whole of
Bashan. These territories abounded in water, a precious commodity in
Canaan, thus constituting one of the most valuable parts of the country; additionally, Manasseh's geographic situation enabled it to defend two important mountain passes—
Esdraelon on the west of the Jordan and
Hauran on the east. The half-tribe of Manasseh had the land from
Jordan to the city
Dora; but its breadth was at
Bethshan, which is now called Scythopolis. In c. 732 BCE,
Pekah, king of
Israel (Samaria) allied with
Rezin, king of
Aram, and threatened
Jerusalem.
Ahaz,
king of Judah, appealed to
Tiglath-Pileser III, the king of
Assyria, for help. After receiving tribute from Ahaz, Tiglath-Pileser sacked Damascus and Israel, annexing Aram and the territory east of the Jordan (tribes of
Reuben,
Gad and East Manasseh in Gilead), including the desert outposts of
Jetur,
Naphish and
Nodab. The population of these territories were taken captive and resettled in Assyria, in the region of the
Khabur River system. ( and ) The diminished kingdom of Israel was again invaded by Assyria in 723 BCE and the rest of the population deported. The riverine gulch,
naḥal Ḳanah (Joshua 17:9), divided Ephraim's territory in the south from Manasseh's territory in the north. The modern Israeli settlement of
Karnei Shomron is built near this gulch, which runs in an easterly-westerly direction. ==Origin==