Phut in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Third among Ham's sons (Genesis 10:6; 1 Chronicles 1:8). The
Coptic for Libya is Phaiat. Jerome (Traditional Hebrew)
mentions a river of Mauritania and the adjoining region as
called Phut. It is generally connected with Egypt and
Ethiopia; in Genesis the order is, from the S. advancing
northwards, Cush (Ethiopia), Mizraim, Phut (a dependency of
Egypt), Canaan (Jeremiah 46:9; Ezekiel 30:5; Nahum 3:9;
Isaiah 66:9 where "Phut" should be read for "Pul"). But in
Ezekiel 27:10; Ezekiel 38:5, Phut is associated with Persia,
Lud, and Ethiopia; however this is no proof of geographical
connection, it is merely an enumeration of regions from
whence mercenaries came.
The people of Phut dwelt close to Egypt and
Ethiopia,and served in Egypt's armies with shield and bow.
The Egyptian monuments mention a people, "Pet," whose emblem
was the unstrung bow, and who dwelt in what is now Nubia,
between Egypt and Ethiopia. Herodotus (iii. 21-22) narrates
that the king of Ethiopia unstrung a bow and gave it to
Cambyses' messengers, saying that when the king of Persia
could pull a bow so easily he might come against the
Ethiopians with an army stronger than theirs. The Naphtuhim
are distinct, living W. of the Delta; the IX Na-petu, or
"nine bows". (See NAPHTUHIM.) Phut is To-pet or Nubia; and
To-meru-pet "the island of the bow," answering to Meroe. The
bow of Libya was strung, that of Ethiopia unstrung.
Read More about Phut in Fausset's Bible Dictionary