Do archaeologists find evidence for a unified, genocidal conquest of Canaan as described in Joshua?
No. Extensive excavation across the Levant reveals continuity of Canaanite settlements and lacks the widespread destruction layers and population disruptions that a coordinated, large‑scale extermination of hundreds of cities would produce; mainstream archaeologists therefore reject the literal conquest account.
What does the Hebrew term herem mean, and does it mandate total annihilation?
Herem covers a semantic range—banishment, prohibition, or destruction. In Joshua the paranomastic infinitive construction emphasizes severity or certainty, and the narrative context portrays total destruction, but scholars note that textual nuance and broader usage allow non‑literal readings such as driving out rather
How do apologists try to reconcile the biblical text with the archaeological record?
Typical apologetic tactics include shrinking the scale of the conquest, treating biblical numbers as symbolic, reinterpreting key Hebrew terms, claiming towns were small or merely vacated, and asserting that absence of archaeological evidence doesn't disprove the events.
Would a conquest that exterminated populations across 300+ towns leave archaeological traces?
Yes. Events on that scale would be expected to produce burn layers, abrupt breaks in material culture, mass graves, or demographic shifts. The relative absence of these signatures at the relevant sites undermines the claim of a widespread, contemporaneous genocide.