Was Joppa (Japho) The City Of Japheth From Which The Coastline People In Genesis 10:5 Set Sail?
Biblical Authority Ministries, April 8, 2026 (Donate)
What an interesting and pointed question. Hebraist Dr. John Gill suggested this possibility in his commentary notes in Acts 9:36 saying, "and others derive it from the name of Japhet, because it looks towards Europe, which is inhabited by the sons of Japhet." It caught my attention since I’ve done much research on the Tower of Babel and its aftermath.
For those who don’t know, Japheth is the oldest son of Noah.
We really don’t know where he went after the events of Genesis 9-11. His
brother Shem lived to the ripe old age of 600 years, but we don’t know how
long Japheth lived—some suggest 600, but he could have lived as long as his father (950)—or naturally, anywhere in between.
Joppa is the modern seaport city of Jaffa and is essentially
absorbed into the modern city of Tel Aviv, Israel today. But it's an ancient
city that many label among the oldest in the world and some suggest it is the
oldest in the world. But how do we know? Simply put, we don’t; but, this city pops up in ancient
writings from time to time. So, it is old.
Jaffa (modern name) or Joppa (~2,000 years ago) was not
always called by these names. Its old name was Japho (~3,500 years ago). This is
what it was called in Moses' and Joshua’s day. Joshua 19:46 says:
And Mejarkon, and Rakkon, with the
border before Japho. (KJV)
Of course, Babel is technically a port city but it is a
river port on the Euphrates River designed to handle river traffic. Joppa/Jaffa
sits on the Mediterranean coast and is designed to set sail for great distances—from
there to Mediterranean coasts or out the Pillars of Hercules (the little
watery region between Spain/Gibraltar and Africa) to the rest of the world.
Jonah set sail from Joppa (Jonah 1:3) and Peter was there (Acts
10:5). But let’s get back to the antiquity of this city and see it's plausible
to have been the very ancient city port that many coastline peoples (descendants
of Japheth) used to set sail and traverse to many places in Europe. Genesis
10:5 says,
From these the coastland peoples
of the Gentiles were separated into their lands, everyone according to his
language, according to their families, into their nations. (NKJV)
The idea that Japheth’s descendants utilized an early
coastal staging area after the dispersion at Babel is both geographically and
logistically plausible within a biblical framework. Genesis 10:5 describes the
“coastland peoples” spreading into their lands, which naturally implies some
level of maritime (boat-style) movement.
From the region of Shinar, the most direct, and easiest, route to the sea
leads northwest toward the Mediterranean coast and southern Anatolia (Modern
day Turkey). They basically follow the Fertile Crescent to the Mediterranean Sea. From there, it is a matter of finding where you think a good port
would be.
It’s reasonable that an early group that specialized in boat
building would be a hub. It makes more sense than a bunch of different family groups
making a bunch of different ports from scratch. Then migrants would have
gravitated toward existing or emerging coastal settlements where resources,
natural harbors, and seafaring knowledge were available.
The earliest ships were likely not large wooden vessels at first, but easier-to-build reed-style boats or moderate wooden vessels that were already capable of significant travel. Over time, these were designed into the more advanced wooden ships that enabled broader maritime expansion across the ancient world. Image requested by Bodie Hodge (ChatGPT)
Given that Noah’s family possessed advanced shipbuilding
knowledge through the construction of the Ark, it is also plausible that such
knowledge persisted among Japheth and certain people to whom he passed it along in
his descendal line. This would contribute to early maritime activity.
However, while the concept of a “launch region” for Japhetic
expansion is viable, the attempt to tie this to a specific city such as Japho
through name similarity to Japheth remains speculative—even though it is possible. Dr Gill seemed
to think it was worthy to mention.
·
Japheth → (יפת)
·
Joppa/Japho → (יפו)
They look similar, where Japheth
ends with a tav (ת) and Japho/Joppa ends with a vav (ו)—remember Hebrew
reads right to left. Although languages immediately changed at Babel, they
continued to vary over time and place. So, while there is no ancient textual
evidence directly linking Japheth to Japho. The name merely shows a plausibility.
Though I wouldn’t expect much discussion of it because of the antiquity of it—it
would be ancient history even in Moses’ day!
Heber/Eber's language coming out of Babel morphed into
Biblical Hebrew, Aramaic, Chaldean, Arabic, and even modern Hebrew [and so on],
so I expect names to change and not be same. Especially, when various people
take control of areas (Canaanites, Phoenicians, etc.) who languages were very different. So, we need to factor in
that names can vary.
We also know that Japho became Joppa and then Jaffa in various
renderings. So, seeing a variation of Japeth go to Japha or a tav to a vav
is easy from a linguistic-historical perspective—if only Dr Gill would have
elaborated.
Nevertheless, is it viable for this ancient port city to be
the very city from which the coastline people set forth? It is literally
between Babel and many European coastline nations of Japhetic descent. Is there
any other ancient seaport city that might be in competition for it? Phoenician
cities aren't Japhetic for instance and should have post-dated Genesis 10's initial setting forth of Japheth's descendants after the scattering (Genesis 10 is a breakdown of the scattering and splitting from chronological account of Genesis 11:1-9).
It makes sense that coastline people would go to an active initial port and
shipbuilder and an ancestor who was a master shipbuilder makes sense. If a port
city was being built or had just been built and ship making is available there
(by an expert), it’s much easier to go there and set sail, than it is to build
a new port city, establish ship building all on your own, learn navigation, all with your own power
with your own language and smaller family size. Japheth did help build an Ark
was an excellent ship builder with that experience.
Ancient sources, including biblical, Egyptian, and later
historical writings, consistently associate Japheth’s descendants with broader
regions and peoples that happen to extend away from Joppa. But no ancients
directly related this port to Japheth. It was a later assessment.
Perhaps this means that while early coastal hubs likely
played a role in post-Babel dispersal, their original names and founders were
either lost or transformed beyond recognition. This is possible too.
Thus, it is reasonable to propose that Japheth’s descendants moved into the Joppa regions at the Mediterranean coast and adjacent coastal areas shortly after Babel and from there expanded into Europe and parts of Asia using maritime routes—and then left it behind. This aligns well with both the geography of the ancient Near East and the biblical description of coastland peoples.
Yet, identifying a specific port city as directly connected
to Japheth by name goes beyond the available evidence and should be treated as
a thoughtful and plausible option but recognize that it is unconfirmed rather than a solid historical
conclusion. In other words, it’s nice to think about but don’t hold it too tightly.
Bodie Hodge, Ken
Ham's son in law, has been an apologist defending 6-day creation and opposing
evolution since 1998. He spent 21 years working at Answers in Genesis as
a speaker, writer, and researcher as well as a founding news anchor for Answers
News. He was also head of the Oversight Council.
Bodie
launched Biblical Authority Ministries in 2015 as a personal
website and it was organized officially in 2025 as a 501(c)(3). He has spoken
on multiple continents and hosts of US states in churches, colleges, and
universities. He is married with four children.
Mr. Hodge earned a
Bachelor and Master of Science degrees from Southern Illinois University at
Carbondale (SIUC). Then he taught at SIUC for a couple of years as a
Visiting Instructor teaching all levels of undergraduate engineering and
running a materials lab and a CAD lab. He did research on advanced ceramic
materials to develop a new method of production of titanium diboride with a
grant from Lockheed Martin. He worked as a Test Engineer for Caterpillar,
Inc., prior to entering full-time ministry.
His love of science
was coupled with a love of history, philosophy, and theology. For about one
year of his life, Bodie was editing and updating a theological, historical, and
scientific dictionary/encyclopedia for AI use and training. Mr. Hodge has over
25 years of experience in writing, speaking and researching in these fields.














