According to the
Hebrew Bible, the tribe consisted of descendants of
Simeon, the second son of
Jacob and of
Leah, from whom it took its name. However, Arthur Peake (1919) suggested that the narratives about the twelve sons of Jacob in Genesis might include later tribal history "disguised as personal history," in which the later histories of these tribal groups are recast in the form of narratives about supposed ancestors. Likewise, the consensus position of contemporary scholarship is that "there is little or no historical memory of pre-Israelite events or circumstances in Genesis." In the biblical account, following the completion of the conquest of
Canaan by the
Israelites,
Joshua allocated the land among the twelve tribes. Kenneth Kitchen, a well-known conservative biblical scholar, dates this event to slightly after 1200 BCE. However, the consensus view of modern scholars is that the conquest of Joshua as described in the Book of Joshua never occurred.
Martin Noth argued that the six tribes that the Bible traces to
Leah, including Simeon, were once part of an
amphictyony prior to the later coalition of twelve tribes. According to Niels Peter Lemche, "Noth's amphictyonic hypothesis determined a whole generation of Old Testament scholars' way of thinking." However, more recently a large number of scholars have dissented from Noth's theory. In the opening words of the
Book of Judges, following the death of
Joshua, the Israelites "asked the Lord" which tribe should be first to go to occupy its allotted territory, and the tribe of Judah was identified as the first tribe. According to this narrative, the tribe of Judah invited the tribe of Simeon to fight with them in
alliance to secure each of their allotted territories. However, the tribe of Simeon is not mentioned in the ancient
Song of Deborah, generally considered one of the earliest-written parts of the Hebrew Bible, and the
Jewish Encyclopedia (1906) claims that Simeon was probably "not always counted as a tribe." According to
Israel Finkelstein, the south of Canaan, in which Simeon was situated, was simply an insignificant rural backwater at the time the poem was written. Another possibility is that Simeon, along with Judah, had simply not joined the Israelite confederacy at this point, or that they had seceded.
Family tree == Biblical narrative ==