Amam
Amam is an ancient city mentioned in the Old Testament, located in the region of Judea in modern-day Israel. Known today as Be’er Nevatim. It appears across 1 verse in Scripture.
Biblical History
Amam appears in Scripture only once, in Joshua 15:26, as one of the cities allocated to the tribe of Judah in the Negeb district during the division of Canaan under Joshua. It is listed among a cluster of settlements in the southernmost portion of Judah's inheritance, in the arid borderland region approaching the wilderness of Zin. While the biblical text provides no specific narrative events associated with Amam, its inclusion in the territorial boundaries of Judah establishes it as a settled place of habitation within the covenant land promised to Israel. The Negeb cities enumerated in Joshua 15 represent Israel's claim to the full extent of the land granted to them, including remote and sparsely populated areas. Amam thus stands as a quiet witness to the comprehensiveness of God's gift to his people — even obscure desert towns were included within the boundaries of the promised inheritance. Its existence in this list underscores the historical and geographical precision with which the biblical authors recorded Israel's territorial legacy.
Archaeological & Historical Notes
Amam is tentatively identified with Be'er Nevatim, a site in the northern Negeb of modern Israel near Beersheba. The region has been surveyed by Israeli archaeologists as part of broader Negeb Bronze and Iron Age surveys. The Negeb district lists in Joshua 15 correspond to genuine settlement patterns from the Iron Age I–II periods, when small fortified towns and farmsteads dotted the arid landscape. While no major excavation has been conducted specifically at the proposed site of Amam, surface surveys have confirmed Iron Age occupation in the vicinity. The site remains largely unexcavated, and the identification with Be'er Nevatim is tentative rather than confirmed.
Verse Appearances (1)
Josh
Sources: ISBE Encyclopedia · OpenBible Geocoding (CC BY) · Pleiades Gazetteer View all →