List of minor Hebrew Bible figures, A–K

(Redirected from Azmaveth)

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Template:Inc-lit This article contains persons named in the Bible, specifically in the Hebrew Bible, of minor notability, about whom little or nothing is known, aside from some family connections. Here are the names which start with A-K; for L-Z see there.

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AEdit

AbagthaEdit

Template:See also Abagtha (Hebrew אֲבַגְתָא) was a court official or eunuch of king Ahasuerus who was commanded along with 6 other officials to parade queen Vashti to go before the king. (Esther 1:10)

AbdaEdit

Template:See also The name Abda (Hebrew עַבְדָּא) means servant, or perhaps is an abbreviated form of servant of YHWH.<ref>International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, (1915) "Abda"</ref> There are two people by this name in the Hebrew Bible.

Where the Masoretic Text has Abda, the Septuagint, depending on the location and manuscript, has names such as Abao, Ephra, Edram, Ioreb, Obeb, and Abdias.<ref>Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry for "Abda."</ref>

AbdeelEdit

Abdeel (Hebrew עַבְדְּאֵל "servant of God"; akin to Arabic عبد الله Abdullah<ref>Strong's Hebrew and Greek Dictionary</ref>) is mentioned in Jeremiah 36:26 as the father of Shelemiah, one of three men who were commanded by King Jehoiakim to seize the prophet Jeremiah and his secretary Baruch.<ref name="aaa">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Septuagint omits the phrase "and Shelemiah son of Abdeel", probably a scribal error due to homoioteleuton.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

AbdiEdit

The name Abdi (Hebrew עַבְדִּי) is probably an abbreviation of Obediah, meaning "servant of YHWH", according to the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia.<ref>International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, "Abdi".</ref> Easton's Bible Encyclopedia, on the other hand, holds that it means "my servant". The name "Abdi" appears three times in forms of the Bible that are in use among Jews, Protestants, and Roman Catholics. There is also one additional appearance in 1 Esdras, considered canonical in Eastern Orthodox Churches.

  1. 1 Chronicles 6:29: "And on the left hand their brethren the sons of Merari: Ethan the son of Kishi, the son of Abdi, the son of Malluch."<ref name="ReferenceA">Jewish Publication Society Bible of 1917.</ref> This verse, in the King James Version and some other Bibles, is verse 44 of chapter 6.
  2. 2 Chronicles 29:12. "Then the Levites arose, Mahath the son of Amasai, and Joel the son of Azariah, of the sons of the Kohathites; and of the sons of Merari, Kish the son of Abdi, and Azariah the son of Jehallelel; and of the Gershonites, Joah the son of Zimmah, and Eden the son of Joah."<ref name="ReferenceA" />
  3. Ezra 10:26. "And of the sons of Elam: Mattaniah, Zechariah, and Jehiel, and Abdi, and Jeremoth, and Elijah."<ref name="ReferenceA" />
  4. 1 Esdras 9:27, where the name appears in the Hellenized form Oabd[e]ios.<ref>Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry for "Abdi."</ref> "Of the sons of Elam: Matthanias and Zacharias and Iezrielos and Obadios and Ieremoth and Elias."<ref>New English Translation of the Septuagint</ref>

According to Cheyne and Black (1899), the two occurrences in the Books of Chronicles refer to a single individual, and the references in Ezra and 1 Esdras are to a second individual.<ref>Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry for "Abdi."</ref>

AbdielEdit

Abdiel (Hebrew עַבְדִּיאֵל) was the son of Guni and the father of Ahi according to 1 Chronicles 5:15. He came from the tribe of Gad; A Gadite who lived in Gilead or in Bashan, and whose name was reckoned in genealogies of the time of Jotham, king of Judah, or of Jeroboam II king of Israel.

AbdonEdit

Abdon (Hebrew עַבְדּוֹן from עָבַד "to serve") is the name of four biblical individuals. It is a diminutive form of the name Ebed.<ref>Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, second entry titled "Abdon."</ref>

  1. An Abdon in the book of Judges: see the article Abdon (Judges).
  2. The first-born of Gibeon of the tribe of Benjamin, mentioned only in passing in genealogies (1 Chronicles 8:30, 9:36).
  3. Abdon the son of Micah. Josiah sent him, among others, to the prophetess Huldah, in order to discern the meaning of the recently rediscovered book of the law (2 Chronicles 34:20). He is referred to as Achbor in 2 Kings 22:12.
  4. Abdon son of Sashak. He is only mentioned as a name in a genealogy (1 Chronicles 8:23).<ref>This section on Abdon incorporates information from the 1897 Easton's Bible Dictionary.</ref>

In addition to its use as a personal name, the proper name "Abdon" is used for a Levitical city mentioned in Joshua 21:30 and 1 Chronicles 6:59.<ref>Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, first entry for "Abdon."</ref>

AbiEdit

See Abijah

AbiahEdit

See Abijah

AbialbonEdit

See Abiel

AbiasaphEdit

Abiasaph (Hebrew אֲבִיאָסָף "my father has gathered") was a son of Korah of the Tribe of Levi according to Exodus 6:24, born in Egypt. Ebiasaph is a spelling variation of Abiasaph.

AbidaEdit

Abida, Abidah or Abeida<ref>Genesis 25:4 in Brenton's Septuagint Translation</ref> (Hebrew אֲבִידָע "my father knows"), a son of Midian and descendant of Abraham and Keturah, appears twice in the Bible, in Genesis 25:4 and 1 Chronicles 1:33.<ref name="cb abida">Template:Cite book</ref> The sons of Abraham's concubines were sent away to the east with gifts from Abraham.<ref>Genesis 25:6.</ref> The father of Hudino, the great-grandfather of Jethro.

AbielEdit

Abiel (Hebrew אֲבִיאֵל "my father is God") was the name of two individuals mentioned in the Bible:

AbiezerEdit

Abiezer or Abie-ezer or Abieezer is the name of three Biblical characters. The name means "My father is help". The characters are:

AbihailEdit

Abihail (Hebrew אֲבִיחָ֑יִל, "my father is might")<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> may refer to one of five different people mentioned in the Bible:

  • Abihail the Levite lived during the time of the wandering of the Israelites in the wilderness. He was the head of the house of Merari and Levi's youngest son. (Numbers 3:35)
  • Abihail was the wife of Abishur of the tribe of Judah. (1 Chronicles 2:29)
  • Abihail, from Gilead of Bashan, was head of the tribe of Gad. (1 Chronicles 5:14)
  • Abihail was the daughter of David's brother Eliab. She was married to David's son Jerimoth and became mother of Rehoboam's wife Mahalath. (2 Chronicles 11:18)
  • Abihail was the father of Queen Esther and uncle of Mordecai. (Esther 2:15; Esther 9:29)

AbihudEdit

Abihud (Hebrew אֲבִיהֽוּד, "my father is majesty")<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> was a figure mentioned in Template:Bibleverse as the son of Bela the son of Benjamin. He is also called Ahihud. Another individual named Abihud is mentioned in the Gospel of Matthew as an ancestor of Jesus. But this Abihud is not listed in the Old Testament.

AbijahEdit

Abijah (Hebrew אֲבִיָּה "my father is YHWH") is the name of five minor biblical individuals:

This name (possibly) appeared on the Gezer Calendar, a Paleo-Hebrew inscription dating to the 9th or 10th Century BC, making it one of the earliest if not the earliest Yahwistic theophoric names outside the Bible.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AbimaelEdit

In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Abimael (Hebrew אֲבִֽימָאֵ֖ל) is the ninth of the 13 sons of Joktan, a descendant of Shem. He is also mentioned in Template:Bibleverse-lb. Abimael means "God is a father."<ref>Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry for "Abimael."</ref>

AbinadabEdit

Abinadab (Hebrew אֲבִינָדָב "my father apportions" or "the father [i.e. god of the clan] is munificent")<ref name="Black 1899">Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry for "Abinadab"</ref> refers to four biblical characters. Where the Hebrew text reads Avinadav, Greek manuscripts of the Septuagint read Am(e)inadab or Abin.<ref name="Black 1899"/> but Brenton's translation of the Septuagint reads "Abinadab".

  1. A man of Kiriath-Jearim, in whose house on a hill the Ark of the Covenant was deposited after having been brought back from the land of the Philistines.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref> "It is most likely that this Abinadab was a Levite".<ref>Ellicott's Commentary for Modern Readers on 1 Samuel 7, accessed 26 April 2017.</ref> The ark remained in his care for twenty years, guarded by his son Eleazar, until it was at length removed by David.<ref>Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse</ref>
  2. The second of the eight sons of Jesse.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref> He was with Saul in the campaign against the Philistines in which Goliath was slain.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref>
  3. One of Saul's sons, who perished with his father in the battle of Gilboa.<ref>Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse</ref>

AbinoamEdit

Template:See also Abinoam (Hebrew אֲבִינֹעַם) was the father of Barak the partner of Deborah. He is mentioned in the following passages: Template:Bibleverse-lb and Template:Bibleverse-lb.

AbiramEdit

Abiram (Hebrew אֲבִירָם) was the firstborn of Hiel the Beth-elite mentioned in Template:Bibleverse.

AbishuaEdit

Abishua (Hebrew אֲבִישׁוּעַ) was the name of 2 minor biblical individuals found in the Hebrew Bible.

AbishurEdit

According to the Hebrew Bible, Abishur or Abishur ben Shammai (Hebrew אֲבִישׁוּר) was the spouse of Abihail, and the father of Molin and Ahban. He was directly from the tribe of Judah as the son of Shammai the son of Onam the great-great-grandson of Judah. (Template:Bibleverse)

AbitalEdit

Template:See also In 2 Samuel 3:4, Abital (Template:Langx ’Ăḇîṭāl) is minor biblical character in the book of Samuel and one of King David's wives. Abital gave birth to David's fifth son, Shephatiah, a minor biblical character.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref><ref name="gale">Template:Cite encyclopediaTemplate:Subscription required</ref>

AbitubEdit

The name Abitub or Abitob (Hebrew אֲבִיטוּב) appears only once in the Hebrew Bible, in 1 Chronicles 8:11, where it is used for a character said to be the son of Shaharaim, in a section on the descendants of Benjamin.<ref>See the entry for "Abitub" in Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica.</ref>

AchborEdit

Template:See also Achbor (Hebrew עַכְבּוֹר) is the name of 2 biblical individuals.

In the Books of Kings

This may be the same Achbor who is mentioned as the father of Elnathan (Hebrew אֶלְנָתָן) in the Book of Jeremiah 26:20–23, and who lived in the reign of King Jehoiakim of Judah.

AchsaEdit

Achsa or Achsah (Hebrew עַכְסָה), was the daughter of Caleb or Chelubai the son of Hezron of the Tribe of Judah. (Template:Bibleverse<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>) Though she is often identified as the Achsah the daughter of Caleb in the time of Joshua.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AchsahEdit

See Achsa

AdahEdit

Template:Hebrew Name; adornment<ref>International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (1915), "Adah."</ref>

  1. the first wife of Lamech, and the mother of Jabal and Jubal. (Template:Bibleverse-lb<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>)

  1. the first wife of Esau, the daughter of Elon the Hittite. It has been suggested by biblical scholars that she is the same person as "Basemath the daughter of Elon the Hittite", mentioned as a wife of Esau in Genesis 26.<ref>Easton's Bible Dictionary entry on Adah</ref><ref>Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry on "Adah"</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> See Wives of Esau. She bore Esau's firstborn Eliphaz, and became the matriarch of the Edomites. (Template:Bibleverse-lb)

The Order of the Eastern Star considers Adah also to be the name of the daughter of Jephthah, although the Bible does not name her.

AdaiahEdit

Adaiah (Hebrew עֲדָיָה, /əˈdeɪjə/) was the name of 8 biblical individuals:

AdaliaEdit

Mentioned only in Template:Bibleverse-lb, Adalia (Hebrew אֲדַלְיָא) is the fifth of the Persian noble Haman's ten sons.<ref name="encbibadalia">Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry for "Adaliah." [1].</ref> Adalia was slain along with his nine siblings in Susa. In various manuscripts of the Septuagint, his name is given as Barsa, Barel, or Barea.<ref name="encbibadalia" />

AdbeelEdit

Adbeel (Hebrew אַדְבְּאֵל "disciplined by God") Nadbeel or Idiba'ilu, was the third son of Ishmael out of twelve. (Template:Bibleverse-lb) The name Adbeel is associated with the personal name and northwest tribe in Arabia known as Idiba'ilu. (Kenneth A. Mathews, 2005, p. 361)

AddarEdit

Addar (Hebrew אַדָּר), according to the Hebrew Bible, was the son of Bela the son of Benjamin the eponymous founder of the tribe of Benjamin. He is briefly mentioned in Template:Bibleverse.

AderEdit

See Eder

AdeelEdit

Adeel (Hebrew עֲדִיאֵל) may refer to 3 people:

  1. The father of Azmaveth, who was treasurer under David and Solomon, mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 27:25.
  2. A family head of the tribe of Simeon, who participated in driving out the Meunim, mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 4:36.
  3. See Azareel

AdinEdit

Adin (Hebrew עָדִין) was the head of a family who returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel in Ezra 2:15, 8:6. However, according to Nehemiah 7:20, his descendants were 655, that is, completely divergent from the descendants in Ezra as 454. He is also found in Nehemiah 10:17 as one who signed Nehemiah's covenant.

AdinaEdit

In 1 Chronicles 11:42, Adina (Hebrew עֲדִינָא lit. Slender) is listed as one of the "mighty men" of David's army. Adina was the son of a chief of the Reubenites named Shiza.

AdinoEdit

Adino (Hebrew עֲדִינוֹ) was an Eznite and one of David's mighty men found in 2 Samuel 23:8.. He is identified with Jashobeam and the name does not occur in other translations in the Bible. Ginsburg offers a corrected form taken substantially from the parallel passage in 1 Chronicles 11:11: "Jashobeam a son of a Hachmonite, chief of the captains; he lifted up his spear." This is plausible, and is very generally accepted, and eliminates the names Adino and Eznite, which do not occur elsewhere in the Bible. Some of the facts are against this. The Septuagint has the names Adino and Eznite. The Latin finds no proper names in the passage, but so translates the words as to presuppose the Hebrew text as we have it. It may be a case for suspended judgment.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AdlaiEdit

Adlai is in Hebrew עַדְלָי, meaning "refuge". In 1 Chronicles 27:29, he is the father of Shaphat. He is mentioned only in this verse.

AdmathaEdit

Admatha (Hebrew אַדְמָ֣תָא) is an advisor to Ahasuerus of Persia, mentioned only in Esther 1:14.<ref name="cbadmatha">Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry for "Admatha.</ref> According to one theory, the verse has suffered from scribal error, and as it originally stood Admatha was instead Hamdatha, not an adviser to Ahaseurus but the father of Haman.<ref name="cbadmatha" />

AdnaEdit

Adna (Hebrew עַדְנָא) is the name of two biblical characters.<ref name="cbadna">Cheyne and Black (1899), Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry for "Adna".</ref>

  • One of the men of pahath-moav who took foreign wives.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • A priest, named as the head of the priestly family Harim in the time of Joiakim.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AdnahEdit

Adnah is the name of at least two individuals in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cbadnah">Template:Cite book</ref>

  1. Adnah (Hebrew עַדְנָה) is found in 2 Chronicles 17:14. He is called Ednaas or Ednas in Septuagint manuscripts, is credited with being a commander of 300,000 soldiers in the army of Jehoshaphat.<ref name="cbadnah" /> His name is spelled with a final He, as opposed to Adna, above, whose named is spelled with an alef.<ref name="cbadnah" />
  2. Adnah (Hebrew עַדְנַח) is found in 1 Chronicles 12:20. He is called Edna in the Septuagint, refers to a member of the Tribe of Manasseh who deserted Saul to support David.<ref name="cbadnah" /> His name is spelled with either a final He or else a Heth, depending on the manuscript.<ref name="cbadnah" />

AdonijahEdit

Adonijah (Hebrew אֲדֹנִיָּה, "My God YHVH") is the name of 2 minor biblical figures.

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • A chief of the people. He sealed the covenant to keep God's Laws in the times of Nehemiah, found in Nehemiah 10:17.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AdonikamEdit

Adonikam (Hebrew אֲדֹנִיקָם, meaning, "My Lord is risen up."<ref name="cb adonikam">Cheyne and Black, Encyclopaedia Biblica, entry for "Adonikam.".</ref>) is a Biblical figure, one of those "which came with Zerubbabel" (Ezra 2:13). His "children," or retainers, numbering 666, came to Jerusalem (Ezra 8:13). In the Septuagint, depending on the manuscript and location, the name is given as Adon[e]ikam, Adonikan, Adeikam, Adenikam, Adaneikam or Adoniakaim.<ref name="cb adonikam" /> In Nehemiah 7:18, his descendants were 667 instead of the previous number 666.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AdrielEdit

Adriel (Hebrew עַדְרִיאֵל) was the son of Barzillai the Meholathite, whom Saul gave in marriage his own daughter, Merab.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The five sons that sprang from this union were put to death by the Gibeonites. (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse). Here it is said that Michal bore these five children; either that she treated them as if she had been their own mother, or that for "Michal" we should read "Merab," in Template:Bibleverse.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AgeeEdit

Agee (Hebrew אָגֵא) was the father of Shammah, who was one of David's mighty men (2 Samuel 23:11). Based on interpretations of 1 Chronicles 11:34 and 2 Samuel 23:32–33 Agee was either the grandfather of Jonathan or his brother. According to Cheyne and Black, his name is a scribal mistake, and should read "Ela"; he is the same as the Ela mentioned in 1 Kings 4:18.<ref name="cb agee">Template:Cite book</ref>

AhabEdit

Ahab (Hebrew: אָחאַב, which means "brother/father") is the name of at least one minor biblical figure:

  • Ahab, son of Koliah, who, according to Jeremiah 29:21, was labeled a false prophet by YHVH <ref>The New Jerome Biblical Commentary, 1991, pages 287288.</ref>

AharahEdit

See Ehi

AharhelEdit

In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Aharhel (Hebrew אֲחַרְחֵל "behind the rampart") is the son of Harum of the tribe of Judah.

AhasaiEdit

See Ahzai, and Meshullam

AhasbaiEdit

Ahasbai (Hebrew אֲחַסְבַּי), the son of the Maachathite, was the father of Eliphelet, one of King David's Warriors (2 Samuel 23:34).

AhazEdit

Ahaz (Hebrew אָחָז) was a son of Micah, and great-grandson of Jonathan.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> (Template:Bibleverse)

AhbanEdit

Ahban (Hebrew אַחְבָּן) was the first son of Abishur and Abihail. He was also the brother of Molid and a Jerahmeelite. He is mentioned in the following passage: Template:Bibleverse.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AherEdit

Aher (Hebrew אַחֵר, translated as "other")<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> was a Benjamite and the father of Hushim. (Template:Bibleverse) He might be the same as Ahiram and Aharah.

AhiEdit

(Hebrew אֲחִי "my brother")

AhiahEdit

See Ahijah

AhiamEdit

Ahiam (Hebrew אֲחִיאָם) is one of David's thirty heroes. He was the son of Sharar (Template:Bibleverse) or according to 1 Chronicles 11:35 of Sacar, the Hararite.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AhianEdit

Ahian (Hebrew אַחְיָן) is the name given to a descendant of Manasseh in the tribal genealogies of 1 Chronicles 7:19. The name appears only in a single time in the Bible.<ref name="cb ahian">Template:Cite book</ref>

AhiezerEdit

Ahiezer (Hebrew אֲחִיעֶזֶר) is the name of 2 biblical figures:

AhihudEdit

See Abihud

Ahihud is the name of 3 or 2 biblical individuals

  1. Ahihud (Hebrew אֲחִיחֻד). A son of Ehud, of the tribe of Benjamin. He may be the same as the first but the text might be corrupt. (1 Chronicles 8:6-7)
  2. Ahihud (Hebrew אֲחִיהוּד), meaning brother of Judah. Chief of the tribe of Asher; one of those appointed by Moses to superintend the division of Canaan among the tribe (Numbers 34:27)

AhijahEdit

Ahijah (Hebrew אֲחִיָּה) is the name of 7 minor biblical individuals.

  1. One of the sons of Ehud (1 Chr. 8:7).
  2. One of the five sons of Jerahmeel, who was great-grandson of Judah (1 Chr. 2:25).
  3. A Pelonite, one of David's heroes (1 Chr. 11:36); called also Eliam (2 Sam. 23:34).
  4. A Levite having charge of the sacred treasury in the temple (1 Chr. 26:20).
  5. One of Solomon's secretaries (1 Kings 4:3).
  6. Son of Ahitub (1 Sam. 14:3-18), Ichabod's brother; the same probably as Ahimelech, who was High Priest at Nob in the reign of Saul (1 Sam. 22:11) and at Shiloh, where the Tabernacle was set up. Some, however, suppose that Ahimelech was the brother of Ahijah, and that they both officiated as high priests, Ahijah at Gibeah or Kirjath-jearim, and Ahimelech at Nob.
  7. Father of King Baasha of Israel (1 Kings 15:27)

AhikamEdit

Ahikam (Hebrew אחיקם, "My brother has risen") was one of the five whom, according to the Hebrew Bible, Josiah sent to consult the prophetess Huldah in connection with the discovery of the book of the law.<ref>Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse</ref>

AhiludEdit

Ahilud (Hebrew אֲחִילוּד) is the father of Jehoshaphat, who serves as court recorder to David (Template:Bibleverse-lb<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>) and Solomon (Template:Bibleverse-lb). In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Ahilud is the father of Baana, an official in Solomon's court sent to gather provisions in Taanach and Megiddo, and Beth Shan.

AhimaazEdit

Ahimaaz (Hebrew אֲחִימָעַץ) was the name of 2 or 1 biblical individuals.

AhimanEdit

Ahiman (אֲחִימַן) is the name of 2 biblical individuals.

  • One of the three giant Anakim brothers whom Caleb and the spies saw in Mount Hebron (Numbers 13:22) when they went in to explore the land. They were afterwards driven out and slain (Joshua 15:14; Judges 1:10).
  • One of the guardians of the temple after the exile. (1 Chronicles 9:17)

AhimelechEdit

Template:Distinguish Ahimelech the Hittite (אֲחִימֶלֶךְ הַחִתִּי) is the name of 1 minor biblical individual which is referred in 1 Samuel 26:6 as a companion and friend of David, when he was hiding from Saul in the wilderness.

AhimothEdit

See Mahath

AhinadabEdit

Ahinadab (Hebrew: אחינדב Akhinadav "my brother Is noble" or "my brother has devoted himself"),<ref name="BrandEngland2003">Template:Cite book</ref> son of Iddo, is one of the twelve commissariat officers appointed by Solomon to districts of his kingdom to raise supplies by monthly rotation for his household. He was appointed to the district of Mahanaim (1 Kings 4:14), east of Jordan.

AhinoamEdit

There are two references in the Bible to people; who bear that name;

AhioEdit

Ahio is the name of 3 biblical individuals.

AhiraEdit

Ahira was the leader of the tribe of Naphtali mentioned in recording of the census, and was the "hereditary" prince of his tribe who made tribal sacrifices to Yahweh, and commander of his tribe in the march. (Template:Bibleverse)

AhiramEdit

Ahiram was a son of Benjamin according to Numbers 26:38.

AhisamachEdit

Ahisamach or Ahisamakh, also Ahis'amach (Hebrew: אחיסמך "brother of support"), of the tribe of Dan, was the father of Aholiab according to Exodus 31:6, Exodus 35:34, and Exodus 38:23.

AhishaharEdit

Ahishahar is the name given to a third-generation descendant of Benjamin (the eponymous forefather of the Tribe of Benjamin) in 1 Chronicles 7:10. This figure is mentioned nowhere else in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb ahishahar">Template:Cite book</ref>

AhisharEdit

Ahishar (אחישר in Hebrew; meaning Brother of song, or singer), the officer who was "over the household" of Solomon (Template:Bibleverse-lb).

AhitubEdit

Ahitub is the name of several minor biblical figures:

  1. Ahitub, son of Phinehas, grandson of Eli, and brother of Ichabod. (Template:Bibleverse, Template:Bibleverse)
  2. Ahitub, son of Amariah and father of Zadok. (Template:Bibleverse)
  3. Ahitub, a descendant through the priestly line of the first Zadok. He was an ancestor of later high priests who served during the fall of Jerusalem and after the exile. (Template:Bibleverse)
  4. Ahitub, a Benjamite. (Template:Bibleverse)

AhlaiEdit

Ahlai is a name given to two individuals in the Books of Chronicles. In the opinion of Thomas Kelly Cheyne, the name is probably derived from "Ahiel" or a similar name.<ref name="cb ahlai">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • The first is either the son or daughter of a Jerahmeelite man named Sheshan.<ref name="cb ahlai" />
  • The second is the father or mother of Zabad, who is listed as one of David's Mighty Warriors in 1 Chronicles 11:41.<ref name="cb ahlai" />

AhoahEdit

Ahoah was the son of Bela son of Benjamin. (Template:Bibleverse)

AholibamahEdit

Aholibamah was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

AhumaiEdit

Ahumai was the son of Shobal or Jabath of the Tribe of Judah. He was head of one of the families of the Zorahites. (Template:Bibleverse)

AhuzamEdit

See Ahuzzam

AhuzathEdit

See Ahuzzath

AhuzzahEdit

See Ahuzzath

AhuzzamEdit

Ahuzzam or Ahuzam is the name of one of the sons of "Asshur, the father of Tekoa," in a genealogy describing the desceandants of the Tribe of Judah.<ref>1 Chronicles 4:6.</ref> He is mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 4:6.<ref name="cb ahuzam">Template:Cite book</ref>

AhuzzathEdit

Ahuzzath or Ahuzzah<ref>Referred to as "Ahuzzah" in the New English Translation, but as "Ahuzzath" in most other sources.</ref> is the name given to an associate of Abimelech, king of Gerar, in Genesis 26:26. According to the Book of Genesis, Ahuzzath accompanied Abimelech when Abimelech went to make a treaty with Isaac. He is mentioned nowhere else in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb ahuzzath">Template:Cite book</ref>

AhzaiEdit

Ahzai (KJV Ahasai) is a name which appears only in Nehemiah 11:13, where it is mentioned in passing.<ref name="cb ahasai">Template:Cite book</ref> The verse refers to a priest, called "Amashsai son of Azarel son of Ahzai son of Meshillemoth son of Immer." In the parallel name in 1 Chronicles 9:12, the name "Jahzerah" replaces "Ahzai."<ref name="cb ahasai" />

AiahEdit

Aiah (איה "Falcon") was the father of Rizpah, mentioned in Template:Bibleverse-lb

AjahEdit

In Template:Bibleverse-lb and Template:Bibleverse-lb, Ajah [איה] is a son of Zibeon. Ajah means hawk. Alternative spelling: Aiah.

AkanEdit

Template:Distinguish In Template:Bibleverse-lb Akan is a son of Ezer and grandson of Seir the Horite. In Template:Bibleverse-lb he is called Jaakan.

AkkubEdit

Akkub was the name of 3 or 4 biblical individuals.

AlamethEdit

Alameth is one of the sons of Becher the son of Benjamin. (Template:Bibleverse)

AlemethEdit

Alemeth was the son of Jarah and the father of Azmaveth mentioned in 1 Chronicles 9:42.

AllonEdit

In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Allon is the son of Jedaiah, of the family of the Simeonites, who expelled the Hamites from the valley of Gedor.

AlmodadEdit

Almodad is one of the sons of Joktan according to Template:Bibleverse and Template:Bibleverse. While the Bible has no further history regarding Almodad, this patriarch is considered to be the founder of an Arabian tribe in "Arabia Felix".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> This is based on the identification of Joktan's other sons, such as Sheba and Havilah, who are both identified as coming from that region.<ref>Skinner, D.D., John, A Critical and Exegitical Commentary on Genesis, T&T Clark Ltd., 1910 (1980 ed.), p. 221. Template:ISBN.</ref>

AlvahEdit

In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Alvah is a chief of Edom and a descendant of Esau. In Template:Bibleverse-lb he is called Aliah.

AlvanEdit

In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Alvan is the eldest son of Shobal and a descendant of Seir the Horite. In Template:Bibleverse-lb he is called Alian.

AmalEdit

Amal was the son of Helem of the tribe of Asher. (Template:Bibleverse)

AmariahEdit

Amariah is the name of 8 or 9 biblical figures.

AmasaEdit

In Template:Bibleverse, Amasa is the son of Hadlai, and one of the leaders of Ephraim (Template:Bibleverse) during the reign of the most wicked King Ahaz.

AmasaiEdit

Amasai was the name of 3 or 4 biblical figures.

AmashaiEdit

See Amashsai

AmashsaiEdit

Amashsai (Amashai in the King James Version) son of Azareel, was appointed by Nehemiah to reside at Jerusalem and do the work of the temple. He merits only one mention in the whole Bible, in Nehemiah 11:13.

AmasiahEdit

In 2 Chronicles 17:16, Amasiah (meaning burden of Jehovah) was the son of Zichri, a captain under King Jehoshaphat.

AmaziahEdit

Template:See also Amaziah is the name of 3 minor biblical figures.

  • In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Amaziah is a priest of Bethel who confronts Amos and rejects his prophesying against king Jeroboam II. As a result, Amos is led to prophesy the doom of Amaziah's family, the loss of his land and his death in exile. Jonathan Magonet has described Amaziah as 'a spiritual leader who believed in his own power and could not risk hearing the word of God'.<ref>Magonet, Jonathan (1992) Bible Lives (London, SCM), 116.</ref>
  • A son of Hilkiah of the descendants of Ethan the Merarite (Template:Bibleverse).
  • The father of Joshah, the chief of the Simeonites in the time of Hezekiah (Template:Bibleverse).

AmiEdit

See Amon

AminadabEdit

See Amminadab

AmittaiEdit

The father of Jonah the prophet, and a native of Gath-hepher (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse). Mentioned in Islam by Muhammad. When Muhammad was returning from preaching in Ta'if and decided to take shelter in the garden of two leaders, Addas, a lowly servant boy, was sent to offer grapes to Muhammad. When Addas came, Muhammad asked which land he came from. Addas replied he was from Nineveh. Upon receiving this answer, Muhammad exclaimed "The town of Jonah, son of Amittai!" Overjoyed, Muhammad then told Addas how Jonah and he (Muhammad) were prophetic brothers.

AmmielEdit

Ammiel was the name of 4 biblical individuals.

AmmihudEdit

Ammihud may refer to a quantity of 5 people in the Hebrew Bible:

AmminadabEdit

Template:See also Amminadab was the name of 3 biblical individuals.

AmminadibEdit

A person mentioned in the Old Testament in Template:Bibleverse, whose chariots were famed for their swiftness. It is rendered in the margin "my willing people," and in the Revised Version "my princely people."

AmmishaddaiEdit

In the Book of Numbers, Ammishaddai (Template:Langx ‘Ammīšadāy "people of the Almighty") was the father of Ahiezer, who was chief of the Tribe of Dan at the time of the Exodus (Numbers 1:12; 2:25).

This is one of the few names compounded with the name of God, Shaddai.

AmmizabadEdit

Ammizabad was the son of Benaiah, who was the third and chief captain of the host under David (1 Chronicles 27:6).

AmnonEdit

Template:See also Amnon was one of the sons of Shammai, of the children of Ezra. (Template:Bibleverse)

AmokEdit

Amok was a chief priest who came to Jerusalem with Zerubbabel and the ancestor of Eber who was priest in the day of Joiakim. (Template:Bibleverse)

AmonEdit

Amon was the name of 3 minor biblical individuals.

AmozEdit

Amoz Template:IPAc-en (Template:Hebrew Name), also known as Amotz,<ref>Strong's Concordance 531. Amots</ref> was the father of the prophet Isaiah, mentioned in Isaiah 1:1; 2:1 and 13:1, and in 2 Kings 19:2, 20; 20:1. The word "amoz" means strong

In Rabbinical Tradition, there is a Talmudic tradition that when the name of a prophet's father is given, the father was also a prophet, so that Amoz would have been a prophet like his son. The rabbis of the Talmud declared, based upon a rabbinic tradition, that Amoz was the brother of Amaziah (אמציה), the king of Judah at that time (and, as a result, that Isaiah himself was a member of the royal family). According to some traditions, Amoz is the "man of God" in 2 Chronicles 25:7–9 (Seder Olam Rabbah 20), who cautioned Amaziah to release the Israelite mercenaries that he had hired.

AmramEdit

Template:See also Amram is minor individual who was one of the sons of Bani that married a foreign wife in Template:Bibleverse.

AmziEdit

Amzi ('am-tsee') is a masculine Hebrew name meaning "my strength" or "strong." Two individuals with this name are mentioned in the Bible:

AnahEdit

In the Book of Genesis, there are two men and one woman named Anah.

AnaiahEdit

Anaiah, a name meaning "Yahweh has answered," appears only twice in the Hebrew Bible, with both appearances in Nehemiah.<ref name=" CB anaiah">On the etymology, see Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Ezra, a Jewish reformer, standing up to give a speech, with thirteen other people standing beside him. Anaiah is listed as one of those standing by.<ref>Nehemiah 8:4.</ref>
  • The second appearance of the name is in a list of people who signed a covenant between God and the Jewish people.<ref>Nehemiah 10:22.</ref>

AnakEdit

Anak was the father of Ahiman, Sheshai, and Talmai in Numbers 13:22

AnamimEdit

Anamim (Template:Langx, ‘Ănāmīm) is, according to the Bible, either a son of Ham's son Mizraim or the name of a people descending from him. Biblical scholar Donald E. Gowan describes their identity as "completely unknown."<ref name="Gowan1988">Template:Cite book</ref>

The name should perhaps be attached to a people in North Africa, probably in the surrounding area of Egypt. Medieval biblical exegete, Saadia Gaon, identified the Anamim with the indigenous people of Alexandria, in Egypt.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

AnanEdit

Anan was one of the Israelites who sealed the covenant after the return from Babylon<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> (Template:Bibleverse). While "Anan" (which means "Cloud") never became a very common name, a much later person so named – Anan Ben David (c. 715 – c. 795) is widely considered to be a major founder of the Karaite movement of Judaism.

AnaniEdit

Anani is a name which appears in a genealogy in Chronicles.<ref>1 Chronicles 3:24.</ref> It refers to a descendant of Zerubbabel. According to the Masoretic Text Anani was born six generations after Zerubbabel. For scholars, this six-generation span after Zerubbabel is the terminus a quo for the date of Chronicles—it implies that Chronicles could not have been written earlier than about 400 BCE.<ref name="Kalimi2005">Template:Cite book</ref> In the Septuagint, Anani is listed as eleven generations removed from Zerubbabel. For scholars who believe that the Septuagint reading for Anani's genealogy is correct, this places the earliest possible date for the writing of Chronicles at about 300 BCE.<ref name="Kalimi2005" />

AnaniahEdit

Ananiah was the father of Maaseiah the father of Azariah was mentioned in the Book of Nehemiah specifically Template:Bibleverse.

AnathEdit

Anath, being described in the Hebrew Bible, was the father of Shamgar, a judge of Israel who slew the Philistines with just using an ox goad. He is mentioned Judges 3:31 and 5:6.

AnathothEdit

Anathoth was the son of Becher the son of Benjamin in Template:Bibleverse.

AnerEdit

Aner (Template:IPAc-en; Template:Langx ‘Ānêr ) refers, in the Hebrew Bible, to one of three Amorite confederates of Abram in the Hebron area, who joined his forces with those of Abraham in pursuit of Chedorlaomer (Gen. 14:13, 24).

AniamEdit

Aniam according to Template:Bibleverse-lb, was one of the sons of Shemida, a Manassehite.

AntothijahEdit

See Anthothijah

AnthothijahEdit

Anthothijah is a name which appears only once in the Hebrew Bible, in a genealogical section listing descendants of Benjamin.<ref>1 Chronicles 8:24.</ref><ref name="cb antothijah">Template:Cite book</ref> It is most likely an adjective used to describe a female person from the town of Anathoth.<ref name="cb antothijah" /> Manuscripts of the Greek Septuagint give the name as Anothaith, Anathothia, Athein, or Anathotha.<ref name="cb antothijah" />

AnubEdit

Anub a'-nub (`anubh, "ripe") was the son of Hakkoz or Coz (Template:Bibleverse).

AphiahEdit

Aphiah, of the tribe of Benjamin, was an ancestor of King Saul and of his commander Abner. According to Saul, his family was the least of the tribe of Benjamin.<ref>1 Samuel 9.</ref> A son of Shchorim, the son of Uzziel (descendant of Gera, son of Benjamin) and Matri (ancestor of Matrites and descendant of Belah, son of Benjamin).Template:Citation needed

AphsesEdit

See Happizzez

AppaimEdit

Appaim is a minor figure who appears in 1 Chronicles 2:30 and 31. He appears briefly in a genealogy of Jerahmeelites, in which he is the father Ishi, son of Appaim, son of Nadab, son of Shammai, son of Onam, son of Jerahmeel. In manuscripts of the Septuagint, he is called Ephraim, Aphphaim, or Opheim.<ref name="cb appaim">Template:Cite book</ref>

AraEdit

Ara was one of the sons of Jether of the tribe of Asher (Template:Bibleverse).

AradEdit

Arad was one of the sons of Beriah (Template:Bibleverse).

ArahEdit

Arah is the name of two minor biblical figures. The name may mean "wayfarer."<ref name="cb arah">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Arah the son of Ulla appears as a member of the Tribe of Asher in the part of the Books of Chronicles devoted to outlining the genealogy of the twelve Tribes of Israel.<ref>1 Chronicles 7:39.</ref>
  • In the Book of Ezra and the Book of Nehemiah, the "sons of Arah" are a group listed among the returnees to Jerusalem in the time of Nehemiah.<ref>Ezra 2:5 mentions 775 returnees of the sons of Arah, Nehemiah 7:10 mentions 652.</ref> Shechaniah, a "son of Shecaniah," was the father-in law of Tobiah the Ammonite.<ref>Nehemiah 6:18.</ref>

AramEdit

Aram is the name of 3 biblical individuals.

AranEdit

Aran is a Horite, the son of Dishan and brother of Uz (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse).

AraunahEdit

Araunah (Hebrew: Template:Script/Hebrew ʾǍrawnā) was a Jebusite mentioned in the Second Book of Samuel, who owned the threshing floor on Mount Moriah which David purchased and used as the site for assembling an altar to God. The First Book of Chronicles, a later text, renders his name as Ornan (Template:Script/Hebrew ʾOrnān).

ArbaEdit

Template:See also Arba (Template:Langx - literally "Four") was a man mentioned in the Book of Joshua. In Template:Bibleverse, he is called the "greatest man among the Anakites." Joshua 15:13 says that Arba was the father of Anak.

ArdEdit

Ard (Hebrew ארד) was the tenth son of Benjamin in Genesis 46:21. It is relatively unusual among Hebrew names for ending in a cluster of two consonants instead of as a segholate.

He is either directly or more remotely a son of Benjamin. Numbers 26:38-40 mentions five sons of Benjamin, together with Ard and Naaman, the sons of Bela, Benjamin's oldest son, counting all seven as ancestors of Benjamite families. In 1 Chronicles 8:1-3 Addar and Naaman are mentioned, with others, as sons of Bela, Addar and Ard being apparently the same name with the consonants transposed. In Genesis 46:21 ten sons of Benjamin are counted, including at least the three grandsons, Ard and Naaman and Gera.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

ArdonEdit

Ardon (ארדון "Bronze") a son of Caleb by Jerioth, 1st Chronicles 2:18

AreliEdit

Areli was a son of Gad according to Genesis 46:16 and Numbers 26:17. He was one of the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

ArgobEdit

Argob was one of the men who came with Pekah to smite King Pekahiah mentioned in Template:Bibleverse.

AridaiEdit

Aridai was one of the children of Haman, all of their relatives were slain by the Jews and destroyed five hundred men.<ref name="Nehemiah 9">Nehemiah 9</ref>

AridathaEdit

Aridatha was a child of Haman executed by the Jews along with his siblings.<ref name="Nehemiah 9"/>

AriehEdit

Arieh was the name of one of the officers of King Pekahiah of the house of Manahen when Pekah the son of Remaliah went against the king.

ArielEdit

Ariel was one of the chief men sent by Ezra to procure Levites for the sanctuary according to Template:Bibleverse.

AriochEdit

Arioch was the name of 2 minor biblical individuals.

  • The king of Eliasar and served as an ally to king Chedorlaomer in his expedition in rebellious tributaries. The tablets recently discovered by Mr. Pinches show the true reading is Eri-Aku of Larsa. This Elamite name meant "servant of the moon-god." It was afterwards changed into Rimsin, "Have mercy, O moon-god."(Template:Bibleverse)
  • The captain of Nebuchadnezzar's body-guard. (Template:Bibleverse)

ArisaiEdit

Arisai was one of the children of Haman in accordance to Template:Bibleverse. The Jews would later slay them fearing for the rise of a new threat unto their people.<ref>Nehemiah 9:6–10</ref>

ArmoniEdit

Template:See also Armoni was one of the two named sons of Saul by Rizpah. He was delivered by the Gibeonites by David and then hanged. (Template:Bibleverse)

ArnanEdit

Arnan was a descendant of David, father of Obadiah, and son of Rephaiah.

ArodEdit

See Arodi

ArodiEdit

Arodi or Arod was a son of Gad according to Genesis 46:16 and Numbers 26:17. He was one of the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

ArzaEdit

Arza Ar'za (Heb. Artsa', אִרצָא, an Aramaean form, the earth; Sept. ᾿Ωρσά v. r. Α᾿ρσᾶ) was a steward or prefect of the palace at Tirzah to Elah king of Israel, whom Zimri assassinated at his banquet. (Template:Bibleverse) The text is not quite clear, and Arza might have been a servant of Zimri.

AsaEdit

Asa, not to be confused with King Asa, was a son of Elkanah a Levite, who dwelt in one of the villages of the Netophathites. (Template:Bibleverse)

AsahelEdit

Template:See also Asahel was the name of 3 minor biblical individuals.

AsahiahEdit

See Asaiah

AsaiahEdit

Asaiah was the name of 4 biblical individuals.

AsaphEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Asaph is the name of 3 minor biblical individuals.

  • One of the Levites who led the choir (Template:Bibleverse) and the 50th chapter of Psalms is attributed to him. He is mentioned along with David as skilled in music, and a "seer" (Template:Bibleverse). His so-called 'sons' mentioned in 1 Chronicles 20:14 and Ezra 2:41 were probably his descendants that were poets and musicians who looked upon him as their leader.
  • Hezekiah's recorder (Template:Bibleverse).
  • The "keeper of the king's forest," to whom Nehemiah willed from Artaxerxes a letter that he may give him timber at the temple in Jerusalem (Template:Bibleverse).

AsareelEdit

Asareel, according to a genealogical passages in the Book of Chronicles, was the son of a figure named Jehaleleel or Jehallelel.<ref>1 Chronicles 4:16.</ref> Asareel and Jehaleleel are mentioned only briefly, in a section of the genealogies adjacent to the descendants of Caleb, although the relationship between them and the descendants of Caleb is uncertain.<ref name="cb asareel">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="DouglasTenney2011">Template:Cite book</ref>

AsarelahEdit

Asarelah, Asharelah or Jesharelah is one of the sons of Asaph, a musician. (Template:Bibleverse)

AsharelahEdit

See Asarelah

AshbelEdit

Ashbel (Hebrew, אשבל) is the third of the ten sons of Benjamin named in Genesis. He founded the tribe of Ashbelites.<ref>Template:Bibleverse-nb</ref>

AshpenazEdit

Ashpenaz was the chief of the eunuchs serving King Nebuchadnezzar, named in Template:Bibleverse and subsequently referred to later in Daniel 1 simply as "the chief of the eunuchs", who selected Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah, sons of the Jewish royal family and nobility, to be taken to Babylon to learn the language and literature of the Chaldeans. It was Ashpenaz who gave Daniel and his companions the names Belteshazzar, Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-Nego.

AshrielEdit

See Asriel

AshurEdit

Ashur was the posthumous son of Hezron by his wife Abiah. He became the father or 'founder' of the town, Tekoa. (Template:Bibleverse)

AshvathEdit

Ashvath was of the tribe of Asher, of the family of Japhlet. (Template:Bibleverse)

AsielEdit

Asiel is listed as one of the descendants of Simeon in 1 Chronicles 4:35. In the deuterocanonical Tobit 1:1, Tobit's family are descendants of Asiel, of the tribe of Naphtali.

AsnahEdit

Asnah was mentioned as the people of the province who came up from the captivity of the exiles, whom Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon had taken captive to Babylon as temple servants. His descendants were among the Nethinim. (Template:Bibleverse)

AspathaEdit

Aspatha was one of the ten sons of Haman executed by the Jews. (Template:Bibleverse)

AsrielEdit

Asriel was a son of Manasseh according to Numbers 26:31, Joshua 17:2, and 1 Chronicles 7:14.

AsshurEdit

Asshur or Ashur was the son of Shem. He went from the land of Shinar and built Nineveh. He probably gave his name to Assyria, which is the usual translation of the word, although the form Asshur is sometimes retained. (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse)

AsshurimEdit

Asshurim is mentioned in Template:Bibleverse, as one of the sons of Dedan. It is likely that this was the term that refers to the descendants of Dedan. Specific identification is not possible, but some north Arabian tribe is probably meant. They should not be confused, however, with the Assyrians who were descendants of Shem's son Asshur.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

AssirEdit

There are 2 biblical individuals named Assir:

  • A son of Korah of the house of Levi according to Exodus 6:24, born in Egypt. It was also the firstborn son of Jehoiachin, King of Judah. Perhaps there is enough ambiguity here to assume that "Assir" is actually an adjective. The text is too vague to be certain... i.e. 1 Chronicles 3:17. Jehoiachin was the last free king of Judah before being led off to captivity... "prisoner" could be a more descriptive use of "Assir" as opposed to the name of a son. Maybe. According to 1 Chronicles 6 he was the son of Abiasaph instead of being the son of Korah.
  • The firstborn of King Jehoiachin from the tribe of Judah. He is mentioned briefly in 1 Chronicles 3:17 at the time of the Babylonian exile in 587/6 BC.

AtarahEdit

Atarah was the wife of Jerahmeel the son of Hezron according to 1 Chronicles 2:26, and was the mother of Onam, and the step-mother of Jerahmeel's firstborns.

AterEdit

Ater was the name of 2 or possibly 1 biblical individual in the time of the Babylonian exile.

  • The head of his 98 descendants who came with Zerubbabel from Babylon. (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse) The King James Version translates his name as Ater of Hezekiah while the Revised Edition of 1 Esdras 5:15 has Ater of Ezekias, margin, "Ater of Hezekiah." the King James Version has "Aterezias."<ref>Orr, James, M.A., D.D. General Editor. "Entry for 'ATER'". "International Standard Bible Encyclopedia". 1915.</ref> The name also appears in (Template:Bibleverse; (Template:Bibleverse), possibly another Ater, but could be the same of number 1. Ater is further mentioned in Template:Bibleverse, who signed the covenant of Nehemiah.

AthaiahEdit

Athaiah the son of Uzziah is a person listed in Nehemiah as a Judahite inhabitant of Jerusalem.<ref>Nehemiah 11:4.</ref> The meaning of the name is uncertain.<ref name="cb athaiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

AthaliahEdit

Template:See also Athaliah was the name of 2 minor biblical individuals.

AthlaiEdit

Athlai, a descendant of Bebai, is listed in the book of Ezra<ref>Ezra 10:28.</ref> as one of the men who married foreign women. The name is a contraction of "Athaliah."<ref name="cb athlai">Template:Cite book</ref> In the equivalent list in 1 Esdras,<ref>1 Esdras 9:29.</ref> the name "Amatheis" or "Ematheis" appears in the same place.<ref name="cb athlai" />

AttaiEdit

Attai was the name of 2 biblical individuals:

AzaliahEdit

Azaliah is mentioned in passing as the father of the scribe Shaphan in 2 Kings 22:3 and the copy of the same verse found in 2 Chronicles 34:8. The name means "Yahweh has reserved."<ref>Holman Bible Dictionary (1991).</ref>

AzaniahEdit

Azaniah is mentioned in passing in Nehemiah 10:9 (10 in some Bibles) as the name the father of Levite who signed the covenant of Nehemiah. The name means "Yahweh listened."<ref>Holman Bible Dictionary (1991).</ref>

AzaraelEdit

See Azarel

AzarelEdit

Azarel (Hebrew: עֲזַרְאֵל), Azareel, or Azarael was the name of 6 biblical individuals found in the Hebrew Bible:

  • A Korahite individual who was one of the mighty men, helpers of the war who came to David to Ziklag. He along with other warriors were described as having armed with arrows. (Template:Bibleverse)
  • A musician who played in the temple (Template:Bibleverse)
  • The son of Jeroham and the leader over the Tribe of Dan of the hosts of David mentioned in Template:Bibleverse
  • An individual who married "strange wives" (i.e. heathen women)<ref name="Catholic Online - Pharisees">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the son of Bani according to Template:Bibleverse.

  • The father of Amashai a priest after the exile and the son Ahzai in Template:Bibleverse
  • An associate of the priest who played the trumpets in the procession when the walls were dedicated. (Template:Bibleverse)

AzareelEdit

See Azarel

AzariahEdit

Azariah (Hebrew – עזריהו azaryahu "God Helped"). There are 20 minor biblical figures named Azariah

File:Uzziah driven out of the temple. Reader.png
Uzziah getting driven out of the temple by the High Priest Azariah II by Paul Hardy.

AzazEdit

Azaz was from the Tribe of Reuben. he was the father of Bela and son of Shema. (Template:Bibleverse)

AzaziahEdit

Azaziah was the name of 3 biblical individuals.

AzbukEdit

Azbuk was the father of Nehemiah, the ruler of the half-district Beth Zur, and made repairs up to a point opposite the tombs of David, as far as the artificial pool and the House of the Heroes. (Template:Bibleverse)

AzelEdit

Azel was the son of Eleasah and the father of 6 children: Azrikam, Bocheru, Ishmael, Sheariah, Obadiah and Hanan according to Template:Bibleverse.

AzgadEdit

Azgad is the name of a Levite who signed Ezra's covenant.<ref>Nehemiah 10:15.</ref> The name means "Gad is strong."<ref name="cb azgad">Template:Cite book</ref>

AzielEdit

See Jaaziel.

AzizaEdit

Aziza was a layman who is from the family of Zattu that married a foreign wife. (Template:Bibleverse) He is also called Zardeus in 1 Esdras 9:28.

AzmavethEdit

Azmaveth was the name of 4 biblical individuals.

AzrielEdit

Azriel was the name of 3 biblical individuals.

AzrikamEdit

Azrikam was the name of 4 biblical individuals

AzubahEdit

Azubah was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

AzurEdit

See Azzur

AzzanEdit

Azzan (Hebrew עַזָּן "strong") was the father of Paltiel, a prince of the Tribe of Issachar. (Num. 34:26).

AzzurEdit

Azzur was the name of 3 biblical individuals named in the Hebrew Bible.

  • The father of the false prophet Hananiah, who disputes Jeremiah's prophecy. (Template:Bibleverse) Hananiah's death was predicted by Jeremiah, and later, in 2 months the prediction was fulfilled. Also called Azur
  • One of the Israelites who signed Nehemiah's covenant in Template:Bibleverse.
  • The father of Jaazeniah, one of the princes who gave a wicked counsel to the city of Jerusalem. (Template:Bibleverse) His name may also be translated as Azur in the King James Version.

BEdit

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BaalEdit

Template:See also Baal (Template:Langx baal) was the name of 2 minor biblical individuals.

Baal-hananEdit

Baal-hanan was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

His native city is not given. For this and other reasons, Joseph Marqaurt supposes that "son of Achbor" is a duplicate of "son of Beor" in Genesis 36:2, and that "Baal-hanan" in the original manuscripts is given as the name of the father of the next king, Hadar.<ref>Josef Markwart (Joseph Marquart), Fundamente Israelitischer und Judi's Here Gesch. 1896, pp. 10 et seq.</ref>

  • A gardener of "the olive trees and sycomore trees in the low plains" in the service of David. Of the city of Geder. (Template:Bibleverse)

BaanaEdit

Baana was the name of 3 or 2 biblical figures:

BaanahEdit

Template:Redirect (Hebrew: בַעֲנָא)

BaaraEdit

Baara was one of the three wives of Shaharaim, according to 1 Chronicles 8:8.

BaaseiahEdit

Baaseiah (Hebrew:באשעיה Meaning: the Lord is bold) was a Gershonite Levite as the son of Michael and the father of Malkijah according Template:Bibleverse. He was also an ancestor of Asaph the seer or poet.

BakbakkarEdit

Bakbakkar, according to the Hebrew Bible, was a Levite dwelling in the villages of the Netophathites, and later carried captive into Babylon. (Template:Bibleverse) He is also one of the descendants of Asaph.

BakbukEdit

Bakbuk (meaning: "bottle" perhaps onomatopoetic), was the ancestor of the children of Bakbuk who were among the Nethinim and returned from Babylon (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse).

BakbukiahEdit

Bakbukiah was the name of 2 biblical figures.

BakkukEdit

See Bakbuk

BaniEdit

Bani was the name of 16 individuals in the Hebrew Bible.

BarachelEdit

Barachel was a Buzite, and was the father of Elihu, an antagonist of Job, according to Job 32:2.

BariahEdit

Bariah was a descendant of the royal family of Judah, being one of the three sons of Shemaiah (Template:Bibleverse).

BarkosEdit

Barkos was a painter who was the father of some of the Nethinim, according to Ezra 2:53.

BaruchEdit

Template:See also Baruch was the name of 3 minor biblical individuals.

BarzillaiEdit

Template:Redirect Barzillai [ברזלי "Iron-like"] was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

  • The Gileadite of Rogelim was 80 years old at the time of Absalom's revolt against King David. Barzillai supplied provisions for David's army at Mahanaim (2 Samuel 17:27–29). After the death of Absalom, being an old man, he was unable to accompany the king back to Jerusalem, but brought Chimham to David for the return journey (2 Samuel 19:31–37).
  • Another figure who married one of Barzillai's daughters was called Barzellai as a result (Ezra 2:61; Nehemiah 7:63). In 1 Esdras 5:38, he is called Zorzelleus.

BasemathEdit

Hebrew: Sweet-smelling or Sweet-smile

  1. Basemath, wife of Esau, and daughter of Elon the Hittite (Template:Bibleverse). She is thought to be identical to or a sister to Adah who is mentioned in Genesis 36.<ref>International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, "Basemath"</ref>
  2. Basemath, another wife of Esau, daughter of Ishmael, sister to Nebajoth and mother of Reuel (Template:Bibleverse). She is thought by some scholars to be the same as Mahalath of Genesis 28.
  3. Basemath, the daughter of Solomon; a wife of Ahimaaz. (Template:Bibleverse)

BavaiEdit

Bavai (bawway; Septuagint Codex Alexandrinus, Benei; Codex Vaticanus, Bedei; the King James Version Bavai, "wisher"), was mentioned as one of those who helped rebuilt the wall of Jerusalem.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref>

BazlithEdit

Bazlith or Bazluth was the ancestor whose descendants were among the Nethinim, and returned with Zerubbabel (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse)

BazluthEdit

See Bazlith<ref>Ezra 2:52</ref>

BealiahEdit

Bealiah (בְּעַלְיָה, Be‘alyah) or Baalyah, a Benjamite, was one of David's thirty heroes who went to Ziklag, mentioned in Template:Bibleverse. The name derives from Baal and Jah, and according to the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (1915) means "Yahweh is Lord."<ref>Orr, James, M.A., D.D. General Editor. International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, "Bealiah" (1915). [2]</ref>

BebaiEdit

Bebai was the name of 3 biblical individuals.

BecherEdit

Becher was the name of two individuals mentioned in the Bible:

BechorathEdit

Becorath, son of Aphiah, of the tribe of Benjamin, was an ancestor of King Saul and of his commander Abner. According to Saul, his family was the least of the tribe of Benjamin. (1 Samuel 9)

BecorathEdit

See Bechorath

BedadEdit

Bedad was the father of Hadad of Edom, (Template:Bibleverse). In Template:Bibleverse, either he, his son or both defeated the Midianites in Moab and their city was named Avith.

BedanEdit

Bedan was the name of 2 biblical figures.

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BedeiahEdit

Bedeiah is a descendant of Bani who married a foreign wife (Template:Bibleverse).

BeeraEdit

Beera was a son of Zophah and from the tribe of Asher (Template:Bibleverse).

BeerahEdit

Beerah was one of the princes of Reuben whom Tiglath-Pileser III carried away (Template:Bibleverse). he was the son of Baal.

BeeriEdit

Beeri was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

  • The father of the prophet Hosea (Template:Bibleverse). Jewish tradition says that he only uttered a few words of prophecy, and as they were insufficient to be embodied in a book by themselves, they were incorporated in the Book of Isaiah, viz., verses 19 and 20 of the 8th chapter. As such, Beeri is considered a prophet in Judaism.<ref>The Midrash: Leviticus Rabba</ref>
  • The father of Judith wife of Esau (Genesis 26:34).

BekerEdit

See Becher.

BelaEdit

Hebrew: בלע BeLa' "Crooked"

Bela was the name of three individuals mentioned in the Bible:

BelahEdit

See Bela

BenEdit

See Jaaziel

Ben AbinadabEdit

Ben Abinadab (Hebrew בנ אבינדב BeN ,'aḄYNaDaḄ "My Father is Liberal"), was one of King Solomon's twelve regional administrators; he was over Dor, and he was married to Taphath, a daughter of Solomon. 1 Kings 4:11 (RSV).

Ben-AmmiEdit

Ben-Ammi (Hebrew בן־עמי for "son of my people"<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>) was the son of Lot and his youngest daughter. He became the father of the Ammonites (see Template:Bibleverse).

Ben DekerEdit

Ben Dekar (Hebrew בנ דקר BeN DeQeR "Son of Pick"), was one of King Solomon's twelve regional administrators; he was over Makaz, Shaalbim, Beth-shemesh, and Elon-beth-hanan. 1 Kings 4:9 (RSV).

Ben GeberEdit

Ben Geber (Hebrew בנ גבר BeN GeḄeR "Son of He-Man"), was one of King Solomon's twelve regional administrators; he was responsible for Ramoth-Gilead and Argob (1 Kings 4:13).

Ben-hailEdit

Ben-hail (Hebrew: Ben-Cha'yil, בֶּןאּחִיַל, son of strength, i.e. warrior; Sept. translates οἱ υἱοὶ τῶν δυνατῶν), was one of the princes sent by king Jehoshaphat throughout the Kingdom of Judah, as to fulfill the king's reformation.

Ben-hananEdit

Ben-hanan was the son of Shimon in the line of Judah (Template:Bibleverse).

Ben HesedEdit

Ben Hesed (Hebrew בנ חסד ben hesed "Son of Grace"), was one of King Solomon's twelve regional administrators; he was over Aruboth, Sochoh, and Hepher. 1 Kings 4:10 (RSV).

Ben HurEdit

Ben Hur (Hebrew בנ חור Ben Hur "Son of Hur") was one of King Solomon's twelve regional administrators; he was over Ephraim. 1 Kings 4:8 (RSV).

Ben-ZohethEdit

Ben-Zoheth was a descendant of Judah being a descendant of Ishi (Template:Bibleverse).

BenaiahEdit

Benaiah was the name of 12 minor biblical individuals.

BeninuEdit

Beninu was a Levite who sealed the covenant with Nehemiah (Template:Bibleverse).

BenjaminEdit

Benjamin was the name of 2 minor biblical individuals.

BenoEdit

Beno was the son of Merari and from Jaaziah 1 Chronicles 24:26–27.

BeorEdit

Beor was the name of 2 biblical figures.

BerachahEdit

Berachah was one of the Benjamite warriors who joined David in Ziklag (Template:Bibleverse).

BeraiahEdit

Beraiah was the son of Shimhi, chief man of Benjamin (Template:Bibleverse).

BerechiahEdit

Berechiah was the name of 7 biblical figures.

BeriahEdit

Beriah is the name of four different biblical individuals:

BeredEdit

Bered was the son of Shulethah, being the grandson of Ephraim (Template:Bibleverse).

BeriEdit

Beri was the son of Zophah of the tribe of Asher (Template:Bibleverse).

BesaiEdit

Besai was the ancestor of the Nethinim who returned with Zerubbabel to Jerusalem (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse).

BesodeiahEdit

Besodeiah was the father of another Meshullam, who was another builder (Template:Bibleverse).

Beth-raphaEdit

Beth-rapha was a descendant of Judah being the son of Eshton (Template:Bibleverse).

BethuelEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Bethuel was the youngest son of Nahor and Milcah. Nephew of Abraham and father of Rebecca and Laban (Template:Bibleverse).

Beth ZurEdit

Beth Zur is mentioned in (Template:Bibleverse-lb) as the son of Maon the son of Shammai. He is also a Jerahmeelite.

BezaiEdit

Bezai was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

BezalelEdit

Bezalel was an architect who constructed the ark in connection with the tabernacle in the wilderness, he was engaged principally in works of metal, wood, and stone; while Aholiab, who was associated with him and subordinate to him, had the charge of the textile fabrics (Template:Bibleverse).

BezaleelEdit

Bezaleel was one of the descendants of Pahath-Moab guilty of intermarriage (Template:Bibleverse).

BezerEdit

Bezer was from the tribe of Asher being the son of Zophah (Template:Bibleverse).

BichriEdit

Bichri was a Benjamite being the father of Sheba who led an insurrection against king David; whom Joab and his army pursued and lob his head over the town's wall (Template:Bibleverse).

BidkarEdit

Bidkar (Hebrew: בדקר) was an officer of the Israelite king Jehu. Jehu ordered Bidkar to throw the body of the king he usurped, Jehoram, into the field of Naboth, fulfilling prophecy. 2 Kings 9:25

BigthaEdit

See Biztha

BigthanaEdit

Bigthana (Hebrew: בִּגְתָן, בִּגְתָנָא Bīgṯān, Bīgṯānāʾ) was a eunuch of king Ahasuerus who in the Greek Septuagint translation of the Bible, they were known as Gabatha (Koine Greek: Γαβαθά καὶ Θαρρα). Bigthan's name is also spelled "Bigtan" or "Bigthana". It is a Persian name which means "Gift of God".<ref name="Mandel2010">Template:Cite book</ref> He and Theresh were planning to kill the king whom Mordecai warned Ahasuerus of.

BigvaiEdit

The name Bigvai occurs several times in Ezra-Nehemiah (Ezra 2:2, 14, 8:14, Nehemiah 7:7, 19 and 10:16).<ref name=Wright>Wright, J. S.,The Date of Ezra's Coming to Jerusalem, Biblical Studies, accessed 19 September 2020.</ref> That refers to 3 people. In the last of these he is one of the "leaders of the people".<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref> By 408 B.C. the Elephantine papyri show that Sanballat was the governor of Samaria, and Bigvai the governor of Jerusalem but Wright says that "it is not suggested that any of these [referred to in Ezra-Nehemiah] is the man who later became governor.<ref name=Wright />

BilgahEdit

Bilgah was allocated the fifteenth division of priestly service when lots were drawn in 1 Chronicles 24.

BilhanEdit

Bilhan was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

BilshanEdit

Bilshan, one of the important men who came with Zerubbabel from Babylon. (Template:Bibleverse;Template:Bibleverse) In 1 Esdras 5:8 he is called Beelsarus. According to Rabbinical Literature, the name Bilshan is improper, but a surname to the preceding name Mordecai. The latter was given this epithet because of his linguistic attainments.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

BimhalEdit

Bimhal was one of the sons of Japhlet in the tribe of Asher (Template:Bibleverse).

BineaEdit

Binea was the son of Moza and the father of Rephaiah or Rapha. He is mentioned in two passages: 1 Chronicles 8:37 and 1 Chronicles 9:43.

BinnuiEdit

Binnui was the name of 4 biblical individuals.

BirshaEdit

Birsha is the king of Gomorrah in Genesis 14 who joins other Canaanite city kings in rebelling against Chedorlaomer.

BishlamEdit

Bishlam was one of the three foreign colonists who wrote a complaint letter against the Jews to Artaxerxes (Template:Bibleverse). The Septuagint renders Bishlam as en eirene, "in peace," as though it were a phrase rather than a proper name; this is clearly or possibly an error.

BizthaEdit

Biztha was the second of the seven eunuchs of Artaxerxes; it may be possible that the name is derived from the Persian besteh, "bound," hence, "eunuch" (Template:Bibleverse).

BocheruEdit

Bocheru was one of the 6 sons of Azel. He is mentioned two times in the Hebrew Bible: 1 Chronicles 8:38 and 1 Chronicles 9:44.

BohanEdit

Bohan was mentioned in Template:Bibleverse as whose stone served as a boundary mark from Judah to Benjamin. He is neither mentioned in the lists of Reuben's sons. Some suggest he was the one who set that rock.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

BukkiEdit

Bukki was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

BukkiahEdit

Bukkiah was a Kohathite Levite being one of the sons of Heman one of the musicians of the first temple (Template:Bibleverse).

BunahEdit

Bunah is mentioned in 1 Chronicles 2:25 as a son of Jerahmeel.

BunniEdit

Bunni was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

  • A Levite living in the time of described as "Standing on the stairs of the Levites were" (Template:Bibleverse).
  • The father of Hashabiah whose descendant, Shemaiah the Levite inhabited the newly recovered city Jerusalem (Template:Bibleverse).

BuzEdit

Buz was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

BuziEdit

Buzi (Hebrew: בּוּזִי, Būzī) was the father of Ezekiel and priest of Jerusalem (Ezekiel 1:3). Ezekiel, like Jeremiah, is said to have been a descendant of Joshua by his marriage with the proselyte Rahab (Talmud Meg. 14b; Midrash Sifre, Num. 78).

CEdit

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CalcolEdit

See Chalcol

CalebEdit

Template:See also This is about the Caleb mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 2:18. For the better-known Caleb son of Jephunneh, see Caleb.

Canaanitish WomanEdit

The Canaanitish Woman can refer to one unnamed biblical individual.

CarkasEdit

Carkas or Carcas is one of the seven eunuchs whom Ahasuerus summoned to parade queen Vashti (Template:Bibleverse).

CarmiEdit

Carmi refers to two individuals mentioned in the Bible:

CarshenaEdit

Carshena or Karshena is a name which appears in a list of high-ranking officials in the court of king Ahasuerus in Esther 1:14. It is derived from the Persian warkačīnā, meaning "wolfish".<ref name="cb carshena">Template:Cite book</ref>

ChalcolEdit

Chalcol, the brother of Darda (Hebrew כלכל kalkol – the same consonants with different vowel points (kilkayl) mean "maintain") is listed in 1 Kings 4:31 as an example of a very wise man who is, nevertheless, not as wise as Solomon. Another person with the same Hebrew name (though spelled Calcol in the King James Version) is listed in 1 Chronicles as the son of Zerah, the son of Judah (son of Jacob).<ref>1 Chronicles 2:6.</ref>

ChelalEdit

See Kelal.

ChelluhEdit

Chelluh, Cheluhi, or Cheluhu is the name given in Ezra 10:35 for one of the men who married foreign women.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

ChelubEdit

Two individuals by the name of Chelub are mentioned in the Hebrew Bible.

  • A descendant of Judah, called "brother of Shuhah" in 1 Chronicles 4:11, in a genealogical passage listing descendants of Judah. According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica (1899), this "Chelub" is the biblical figure better known as Caleb.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • An Ezri son of Chelub was an overseer of agricultural work in the time of king David according to 1 Chronicles 27:26.

ChelubaiEdit

See #Caleb

ChesedEdit

See Kesed

ChenaanahEdit

Chenaanah is the name of two biblical figures.

  • In a genealogical section of Chronicles concerned with the Tribe of Benjamin, a Chenaanah son of Bilhan is mentioned.<ref name="1 Chronicles 7:10">1 Chronicles 7:10.</ref>
  • The false prophet Zedekiah is called "son of Chenaanah".<ref>1 Kings 22:11, 24; 2 Chronicles 18:10.</ref>

ChenaniEdit

Chenani was one of the men mentioned in Template:Bibleverse, in connection with the constitution of "congregation." If the names represent houses or families, eight Levitical houses probably sang some well-known psalm on this occasion.

ChenaniahEdit

Chenaniah, according to Chronicles, was a Levite leader in the time of David.<ref>1 Chronicles 15:22, 27; 26:29.</ref> The Hebrew text is unclear as to whether he was in charge of something to do with singing or with the carrying of the ark.<ref name="cb chenaniah">Template:Cite book</ref>

CheranEdit

Cheran or Keran was the son of Dishon the Horite (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse).

ChileabEdit

Template:Main article Chileab (Template:Langx, Ḵīləʾāḇ) also known as Daniel, was the second son of David, King of Israel, according to the Bible. He was David's son with his third wife Abigail, widow of Nabal the Carmelite, and is mentioned in Template:Bibleverse, and Template:Bibleverse. Unlike the other of David's three elder sons, Amnon, Absalom, and Adonijah who were important characters in 2 Samuel, Chileab is only named in the list of David's sons and no further mention is made of him. Though being the second son,...

ChimhamEdit

Chimham, Chimhan <ref>Masoretic Text at 2 Samuel 19:40.</ref> or Kimham <ref>Template:BibleverseNew International Version.</ref> was a servant nominated by Barzillai to accompany King David to Gilgal during his return to Jerusalem after the death of Absalom. (2 Samuel 19:37–40)

The name also refers to a place near Bethlehem where Johanan regrouped before departing to Egypt.<ref>Jeremiah 41:17.</ref>

ChislonEdit

Chislon was the father of Elidad, a prince of the Tribe of Benjamin. (Num. 34:21)

Col-hozehEdit

Col-hozeh was the father of Shallum (Template:Bibleverse), who was the official of Mizpah at the time, and head of the repairs to certain walls and fountains. He is further mentioned as the father of Baruch though it is not explicitly mentioned that Baruch's brother was Shallum, distinguishing this Col-hozeh from the previous (Template:Bibleverse).

ConaniahEdit

Conaniah also called Konaniah may be the name of 2 individuals:

Concubine, AramitessEdit

The concubine, Aramitess was the mother of Machir, the father of Gilead, she was the concubine of Ashriel (Template:Bibleverse).

CozEdit

Coz or Koz was the son of Helah and father of Anub and Hazzobebah (Template:Bibleverse).

CushiEdit

Cushi was the name of 2 biblical individuals found in the Hebrew Bible.

  • The father of Shelemiah, and so as the great-grandfather of Jehudi who later joined Jeremiah and Baruch in the request of the men to read the scrolls of Jeremiah to the king's direct advisors. Some point afterwards, Jehoiachim demolishes the scroll by casting it to a pit of fire. (Template:Bibleverse)
  • The father of the Prophet Zephaniah in Template:Bibleverse-lb; he was also the son of Gedaliah which was the son of Amariah the son of Hezekiah.

Another unnamed biblical figure called "the Cushite" is found in Template:Bibleverse as a messenger from Joab who brought tidings to David, after the death of Absalom whom Joab killed. Shortly after David mourns for his beloved son. (Template:Bibleverse) The King James Version translates his name as Cushi as a term for an Ethiopian descent.

DEdit

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DalaiahEdit

See Delaiah

DalphonEdit

Dalphon (Hebrew דַּלְפוֹן "to weep") was one of the ten sons of Haman, killed along with Haman by the Jews of Persia, according to Esther 9:7.

DaraEdit

See Darda

DardaEdit

Darda (Hebrew דַּרְדַּע) was one of the exemplars of wisdom than whom Solomon was wiser.<ref>1 Kings 4:31.</ref> In 1 Chronicles 2:6, his name is misspelled as "Dara."<ref name="cb darda">Template:Cite book</ref>

DarkonEdit

Darkon was the ancestor of his descendants who were among the servants of Solomon who returned with Zerubbabel (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse).

DathanEdit

Template:Main article Dathan along with Korah and Abiram, being the son of Eliab rebelled against Moses (Template:Bibleverse). He was sent to Sheol by Yahweh cause of his disobedience (Template:Bibleverse).

Daughter of MachirEdit

The Daughter of Machir was an unnamed biblical figure mentioned in Template:Bibleverse, she was the daughter of Machir the son of Manasseh and one of the wives of Hezron who bore him Segub which became the father of Jair.

Daughter of MeshullamEdit

The Daughter of Meshullam is an unnamed biblical individual whom Johanan, Tobiah's son married; her father was Meshullam (Template:Bibleverse).

Daughter of PutielEdit

The Daughter of Putiel is an unnamed biblical individual whom Eleazar the son of Aaron married and bore him Phinehas (Template:Bibleverse).

Daughter of ShechaniahEdit

The Daughter of Shechaniah is a biblical figure unnamed and married to Tobiah, she was daughter to Shechaniah son of Arah, whom her father was widely respected; affecting her husband as feared (Template:Bibleverse).

Daughter of ShuahEdit

The Daughter of Shuah is an unnamed figure married to Judah, son of Jacob; she was the daughter of Shuah who bore Judah, Er, Onan and Shelah (Template:Bibleverse). The reference to Judah's wife in Genesis 38:12 refers to her as the "daughter of Shuah", or "bat-Shuah" in Hebrew. This has led some to take Bat-Shuah (and variants) as her actual name.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> A midrashic tradition says her name was Aliyath.<ref>Template:Cite book Chapter 45:4,29</ref> Bat-Shuah is also an alternative name for Bathsheba, wife of Judah's descendant, King David.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref>

DebirEdit

Debir was a king of Eglon, slain by Joshua and his valiant men, he camped before Gibeon and warred against it with the other kings, they hid in a cave and was hunged later (Template:Bibleverse).

DeborahEdit

Template:See also Deborah appears in the Hebrew Bible as the wet nurse of Rebecca (Genesis 35:8). She is first mentioned by name in the Torah when she dies in a place called Alon Bachot (אלון בכות), "Tree of Weepings" (Genesis 35:8), and is buried by Jacob, who is returning with his large family to Canaan. According to Rashi, Deborah was sent by Laban to care for his sister Rebecca when the latter went to marry Isaac (Genesis 24:59).

DedanEdit

Dedan (Hebrew:דְּדָןTemplate:Lrm) may refer to 2 biblical characters.

  • A son of Raamah, son of Cush the son of Ham (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse). His descendants is further mentioned in Isaiah 21:13, Ezekiel 27:15. They probably settled among the sons of Cush, on the northwest coast of the Persian Gulf (aka Arabian Gulf) and their descendants are likely among the Arabs of today.
  • The son of Jokshan, the son of Abraham through Keturah and his sons, Leummim, Letushim and Asshurim (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse).

DelaiahEdit

Delaiah ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "drawn out by YHWH").<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> is the name of several biblical persons:

DeuelEdit

Deuel (Hebrew דְּעוּאֵל) was the father of Eliasaph the leader of the Tribe of Gad, as noted in four verses in the Book of Numbers: Numbers 1:14; 7:42,47; 10:20. However, in Numbers 2:14 this Eliasaph is called "the son of Reuel."

DiblaimEdit

Diblaim (Hebrew דִּבְלָיִם "cakes of pressed figs") was the father of the prophet Hosea's wife, Gomer. His name means 'doubled cakes'. (Hosea 1:3)

DibriEdit

Dibri, a Danite, was the father of Shelomith, according to Leviticus 24:11. Shelomith's son was stoned to death by the people of Israel for blasphemy following Moses' issue of a ruling<ref>Lev. 24:15–16.</ref> on the penalty to be applied for blasphemy.

DiklahEdit

Diklah was a son of Joktan according to Genesis 10:27, 1 Chronicles 1:21.

DishanEdit

Template:For Dishan (Hebrew דִּישׁוֹן dishon) was the youngest son of Seir the Horite. (Genesis 36:21)

DishonEdit

Dishon may refer to 2 biblical individuals.

DodavahuEdit

Dodavahu or Dodavah, according to Chronicles, was the father of Eliezer, a prophet.<ref name="cb dodavah">Template:Cite book</ref>

DodoEdit

Dodo (Hebrew דּוֹדוֹ dodo "his beloved" or "his uncle" from דּוֹד dod meaning "beloved" or "father's brother") is a name given to three persons in the Bible:

DumahEdit

Dumah was one of the sons of Ishmael (Template:Bibleverse; Template:Bibleverse). Some scholars identify Dumah with the ancient city of Duma in modern Saudi Arabia.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

EEdit

Template:Compact TOC

EbalEdit

Ebal may refer to 2 biblical figures:

  • A son of Shobal, a descendant of Seir the Horite, he was a relative to the Esauites in Template:Bibleverse.
  • See Obal

EbedEdit

  • The father of Gaal, mentioned in Judges 9.
  • The son of Jonathan, one of the heads of household who returned from the Babylonian exile in the Book of Ezra (Ezra 1:6).

Ebed-melechEdit

Ebed-melech (Hebrew: עבד-מלך {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} "servant of a king"<ref>Strong's Hebrew Lexicon Number H5663.</ref>), an Ethiopian eunuch, intervened with king Zedekiah on behalf of Jeremiah<ref>Jeremiah 38:7ff.</ref>

EberEdit

Eber was the name of 5 biblical individuals of the Hebrew Bible.

EbiasaphEdit

See Abiasaph

EdenEdit

Eden may refer to the Garden of Eden or the singular person named Eden described in Template:Bibleverse as the son of Joah and one of the Levites who sanctified the Temple of the Lord by assisting in reforming the public worship of the sanctuary in the time of Hezekiah. In (Template:Bibleverse), Eden along with other people appointed, helped assisted Kore faithfully in the towns of the priests, distributing to their fellow priests according to their divisions, old and young alike.

EderEdit

Eder was a Benjaminite chief (Ader in the King James Version) (1 Chronicles 8:15)

EglahEdit

Eglah was one of David's wives and the mother of Ithream, according to 2 Samuel 3:4.

EhiEdit

In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Ehi is the third son of Benjamin. In Template:Bibleverse-lb he is called Aharah, and in Template:Bibleverse-lb he is called Ahiram.

EhudEdit

Template:Further Ehud was one of the sons of Bilhan in a Benjamite clan (Template:Bibleverse).

EkerEdit

Eker was one of the sons of Ram the firstborn son of Jerahmeel the brother of Ram. He is mentioned in (Template:Bibleverse-lb).

EladahEdit

Eladah was the son of Tahath and father of another Tahath, a descendant of Ephraim (Template:Bibleverse).

ElahEdit

Template:See also Elah is the name of 5 minor biblical individuals.

  • Elah was the father of King Hoshea of Israel (2 Kings 17:1, 18:1)
  • Elah was the name of an Edomite clan {the name of an eponymous chieftain} mentioned in Genesis 36:31–43.
  • Elah was the second son of Caleb the son of Jephunneh (Template:Bibleverse).
  • Elah was the father of Shimei comissary of Solomon (Template:Bibleverse).
  • Elah was a Benjamite and son of one of the chiefs, Uzzi (Template:Bibleverse) Of the tribes where the country was settled.

ElasahEdit

Elasah or Eleasah (Hebrew: אלעשה meaning 'made by God') was the name of four individuals mentioned in the Bible:

  • The son of Shaphan, who was chosen by King Zedekiah of Judah to be one of the two messengers to take Jeremiah's letter to Nebuchadnezzar (Jeremiah 29:3) He was probably the brother of Ahikam, who had taken Jermiah's part at the time of his arrest after the temple sermon <ref name="The Interpreter's Bible 1951">The Interpreter's Bible, 1951, volume V, p. 1017.</ref>
  • One of the sons of Pashur who was rebuked for marrying a foreign woman (Ezra 10:18–19)
  • The son of Helez, a Jerahmeelite (1 Chronicles 2:39–40). He is called "Eleasah" in the King James Bible.<ref name="cb elasah">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • A descendant of Saul according to 1 Chronicles 8:37. He is called "Eleasah" in the King James Bible.<ref name="cb elasah" />

EldaahEdit

Eldaah appears as one of the sons of Midian (son of Abraham) in Genesis 25:4 and 1 Chronicles 1:33.

EleadEdit

Elead appears in 1 Chronicles 7:21 as the name of a man who, along with his brother Ezer, is killed by farmers near Philistine the city of Gath. It is unclear whether Elead is intended by the Chronicler as the son or a later descendant of Ephraim, and it is likewise uncertain whether this Elead is the same figure as the Eleadah mentioned in the previous verse.<ref name="Boda2010">Template:Cite book</ref>

EleasahEdit

See Elasah.

EliadaEdit

Eliada (rendered once as Eliadah by the King James Bible) is the name of three individuals in the Hebrew Bible.

  • The son of David, who was originally called Beeliada.<ref name="cb eliada">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • A Benjamite captain in the time of king Jehoshaphat.<ref>2 Chronicles 17:17.</ref>
  • The father of Rezon the Syrian, spelled "Eliadah" in the King James Version.

EliadahEdit

See Eliada.

EliezerEdit

Eliezer, son of DodavahuEdit

See Dodavahu

EliphalEdit

Eliphal son of Ur is listed as one of David's Mighty Warriors in 1 Chronicles 11:35. In the corresponding place in Samuel's version of the list (2 Samuel 23:34), he is called "Eliphelet son of Ahasbai the Maachathite." According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica, the name "Eliphal" (Hebrew Template:'lypl ) is copyist's error for "Eliphelet" ( Template:'lyplt ) caused by dropping the final letter in the name.<ref name="cb eliphelet"/><ref>Ancient Hebrew, in general, did not include vowels. For a more thorough description, see Hebrew alphabet.</ref>

ElipheletEdit

Eliphelet is a Hebrew name meaning "God is a deliverance." <ref name="cb eliphelet" /> It is the name of several figures in the Hebrew Bible, and appears under several spellings.<ref name="cb eliphelet">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>The spellings Elpalet, Elpelet, Eliphal, Eliphalet, and Eliphalat appear in English Bibles. In manuscripts of the Greek Septuagint, the spellings Aleiphaleth, Aleiphat, Eleiphaath, Eleiphala, Eleiphalat, Eleiphalet, Eleiphaleth, Eleiphaneth, Eleiphal, Eliaphalet, Eliphaad, Eliphaal, Eliphaath, Eliphael, Eliphala, Eliphalad, Eliphalat, Eliphalatos, Eliphaleis, Eliphalet, Eliphath, Elphadat, Elphalat, Elphat, Emphalet, and Ophelli occur. For the exact manuscripts and passages where these names appear, see the Encyclopaedia Biblica article for "Eliphelet."</ref>

  • Eliphelet is the name given to a son of David in 2 Samuel 5:16, and 1 Chronicles 3:8 and 14:7. Due to a textual error, Chronicles records Eliphelet twice, as if it were the name of two different sons of David.<ref name="cb eliphelet" />
  • Eliphal, son of Ur (2 Samuel 23:34) or Ahasbai (1 Chronicles 11:35), is listed as one of David's Mighty Warriors. The Encyclopaedia Biblica claims that "Eliphal" is likely a scribal error for "Eliphelet."<ref name="cb eliphelet" />
  • Eliphal son of Eshek appears in a genealogy of the Tribe of Benjamin (1 Chronicles 8:39).
  • An Eliphelet is named among the "descendants of Adonikam," one of the groups that returned with Ezra from the Babylonian captivity according to Ezra 8:13.
  • An Eliphelet, one of the "descendants of Hashum," is listed as one of the men who married foreign women according to Ezra 10:33.

EliasaphEdit

Eliasaph was the name of two individuals mentioned in the Bible:

EliathahEdit

Eliathah is the name given in 1 Chronicles 25:4 to one of the "fourteen sons" of Heman. According to 25:27, he gave his name to one of the twenty-four classes of temple singers.

ElidadEdit

Elidad was a prince of the tribe of Benjamin; one of those appointed by Moses to superintend the division of Canaan amongst the tribe (Numbers 34: 21).

ElienaiEdit

Elienai, one of the nine sons of Shimei, appears in a genealogical passage as a descendant of Benjamin in 1 Chronicles 8:20. The consonants which make up the Hebrew name are only in this one passage read as Elienai; elsewhere the pronunciation is Elioenai.<ref name="cb elienai">Template:Cite book</ref>

ElihorephEdit

Elihoreph (Hebrew אליחרף) was a scribe in King Solomon's court. He was a son of Shisha and brother of Ahiah. (1 Kings: 4:3) The name means "'my God repays,' or 'my God is the giver of the autumn harvest.'"<ref name="Holman Bible Dictionary">Holman Bible Dictionary.</ref>

ElijahEdit

Elijah (Hebrew: אליה) was the name of three minor biblical individuals beside from the famous prophet Elijah.

  • One of the sons of Jeroham according to Template:Bibleverse.
  • One of the descendants of the Harim, of the tribe of Levi who had married strange wives in the guiltiness of intermarriage. (Template:Bibleverse)
  • A descendant of Elam, of the priestly line who is also listed as being guilty of intermarriage in Ezra 10:26.

ElimelechEdit

Elimelech was the husband of Naomi. Together they had two sons, Mahlon and Chilion. He was originally a resident of Bethlehem before moving to Moab with his family, where he died (see Template:Bibleverse). All of his property was later purchased by Boaz (see Template:Bibleverse).

ElioenaiEdit

Elioenai is the name of several minor persons found in the Hebrew Bible.

  • An Elioenai appears in 1 Chronicles 3:23–24: the son of Neariah, the son of Shemaiah, the son of Shecaniah, a descendant of king Jeconiah.
  • A clan leader in the Tribe of Simeon, according to 1 Chronicles 4:36.
  • Elioenai son of Becher, a descendant of the Tribe of Benjamin according 1 Chronicles 7:8.
  • A descendant of Pashhur, one of the priests listed as having married foreign women (Ezra 10:22).
  • A descendant of Zattu, also listed with those who had foreign wives (Ezra 10:27).
  • A priest involved in the dedication of the wall of Jerusalem according to Nehemiah 12:41. This may be the same as the descendant of Passhur (above).<ref name="cb elioenai">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • Elioenai or Elihoenai, son of Meshelemiah, son of Korah (1 Chronicles 26:3).
  • Elioenai or Elionenai was a descendant of David. He was the father of Akkub, and son of Neariah.

ElishamaEdit

Elishama (Hebrew: אלישמע my God heard) was the name of several biblical characters, including:

ElishaphatEdit

Elishaphat, son of Zichri, was one of the "captains of hundreds" associated with Jehoiada in restoring king Jehoash to the throne Template:Bibleverse-lb.

ElishebaEdit

Elisheba ("God is my oath", cognate to the name Elizabeth) is the wife of Aaron and sister-in-law of Moses. Her sons were Nadab, Abihu, Eleazer and Ithamar. (Exodus 6:23).

ElizaphanEdit

Elizaphan was a prince of the tribe of Zebulun; one of those appointed by Moses to superintend the division of Canaan amongst the tribe (Num. 34:25).

ElizurEdit

Elizur was a son of Shedeur and a prince of the House of Reuben according to Numbers 1:5, and one of the leaders of the tribes of Israel. He appears only in the Book of Numbers, in five verses (1:5; 2:10; 7:30, 35; 10:18).<ref name="cb elizur">Template:Cite book</ref>

ElnaamEdit

Elnaam, according to 1 Chronicles 11:46, was the father of Jeribai and Joshaviah, two of David's Mighty Warriors.

ElnathanEdit

Elnathan (Hebrew אלנתן Elnathan "God gave") is a Hebrew name found in 2 Kings, Jeremiah and Ezra.

According to Template:Bibleverse, Elnathan of Jerusalem was the father of Nehushta. Nehushta was the mother of King Jeconiah, whose father was King Jehoiakim. Despite this close relationship to the king, Elnathan was one of those who, according to Template:Bibleverse-lb opposed Jehoiakim when he cut up and burnt a scroll that had been brought to him, containing Jeremiah's prophesies of the forthcoming destruction of Judah. Elnathan's father Achbor was a strong supporter of the earlier reforms of King Josiah, which may have influenced Elnathan's behavior,<ref>See for example Magonet, Jonathan (1992) Bible Lives (London, SCM), 107.</ref> although according to Template:Bibleverse-lb he had earlier been closely involved in the persecution of the prophet Uriah ben Shemaiah.

In Template:Bibleverse, the name Elnathan occurs three times:

Then sent I for Eliezer, for Ariel, for Shemaiah, and for Elnathan, and for Jarib, and for Elnathan, and for Nathan, and for Zechariah, and for Meshullam, chief men; also for Joiarib, and for Elnathan, which were teachers. (Revised Version)

Donna Laird proposes that the repetition of "Elnathan", and the similarity between the names "Jarib" and "Joiarib", indicate a copyist's accidental repetition.<ref name="Laird2016">Template:Cite book</ref>

ElonEdit

Elon (Template:Hebrew Name) was the name of two individuals mentioned in the Bible:

ElpaalEdit

Elpaal is a name mentioned briefly in 1 Chronicles 8, in a genealogy of the Tribe of Benjamin.<ref>Verses 11 and 12.</ref> He is recorded as the son of a woman named Hushim, the wife of a man named Shaharaim. The relationship between Shaharaim and Benjamin is not spelled out by the Chronicler. Elpaal is recorded as the father of people who included the builders or ancestors of the towns of Ono, Lod, and Ajalon.

ElpaletEdit

See Eliphelet (biblical figure)

ElpeletEdit

See Elpelet

EluzaiEdit

Eluzai, in 1 Chronicles 12:6,<ref>Verse 5 in some Bibles.</ref> is the name of a Benjamite warrior who joined the forces of David at Ziklag. The name may have meant "God is my refuge."<ref name="cb eluzai">Template:Cite book</ref>

ElzabadEdit

Elzabad is the name of two biblical figures.

  • Elzabad appears ninth in a list of eleven warriors from the Tribe of Gad who, according to 1 Chronicles 12:12, joined forces with David "at the stronghold in the wilderness."
  • Elzabad, the son of Shemaiah, the son of Obed-edom, is listed as a Korahite porter in 1 Chronicles 26:7.

ElzaphanEdit

Elzaphan was a son of Uzziel of the house of Levi according to Exodus 6:22, born in Egypt. He was a nephew of Amram and a cousin of Aaron, Miriam, and Moses. He and Mishael were asked by Moses to carry away Nadab's and Abihu's bodies to a place outside the camp. (Leviticus 10:4). In the wilderness of Sinai he was named chief of the house of Kohath (Numbers 3:30).

EnanEdit

Enan is mentioned several by way of reference to his son, "Ahira the son of Enan," who according to the Book of Numbers was the tribal leader of the Tribe of Naphtali in the time of the wilderness wanderings following the Exodus.<ref>He is mentioned in Numbers 1:15, 2:29, 7:78, 8:3, and 10:27.</ref>

EnochEdit

Template:See also In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Enoch is the firstborn son of Cain and the father of Irad. Cain named the city of Enoch after his son.

EnanEdit

For the place-name containing Enan, see Hazar Enan.

Enan was a member of the house of Naphtali according to Numbers 1:15. He was the father of Ahira.

EphlalEdit

Ephlal is the name given to a Jerahmeelite found a genealogy in 1 Chronicles.<ref>1 Chronicles 2:37.</ref> He is identified as the son of Zabad, the son of Nathan, the son of Attai, the son of Jarha, the son-in-law of Sheshan, the son of Ishi, the son of Appaim, the son of Nadab, the son of Shammai, the son of Onam, the son of Jerahmeel. In various manuscripts of the Greek Septuagint, the name is found in the forms Aphamel, Aphamed, and Ophlad. Stanley Arthur Cook (1899) suggested that the name might originally have been either an abbreviated form of Eliphelet, or else the name "Elpaal."<ref name="cb TITLE">Template:Cite book</ref>

EphodEdit

Ephod was the father of Hanniel, a prince of the Tribe of Manasseh. (Num. 34:23).

EphronEdit

Ephron the Hittite, son of Zohar, lived in Mamre among the children of Heth. Abraham comes to the Hittites, which are strangers to him, and asks them to sell him a property that he can use as a burial site. The Hittites, flattering Abraham by calling him a mighty prince says that he can choose whichever tomb he wants (Template:Bibleverse). Abraham then asks them to contact Ephron son of Zohar who owns the cave of Machpelah which he is offering to buy for "the full price". Ephron slyly replies that he is prepared to give Abraham the field and the cave within, knowing that that would not result in Abraham having a permanent claim on it.<ref name=theol>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Abraham politely refuses the offer and insists on paying for the field. Ephron replies that the field is worth four hundred shekels of silver and Abraham agrees to the price without any further bargaining.<ref name=theol/> He then proceeded to bury his dead wife Sarah there (Template:Bibleverse).

ErEdit

Er (Hebrew: אה Observant) was the name of several biblical characters, including:

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

EranEdit

Template:Anchor Eran (Template:Langx) was a son of Shuthelah of the Tribe of Ephraim, according to Numbers 26:36.Template:Citation needed

EriEdit

In Template:Bibleverse-lb Eri (עֵרי "watchful") is the son of Gad. He was the progenitor of the Erites. (Template:Bibleverse-lb)

EshekEdit

Eshek is a name which appears only once in the Hebrew Bible, in a genealogy of the Tribe of Benjamin.<ref name="1 Chronicles 8:39">1 Chronicles 8:39.</ref><ref name="cb eshek">Template:Cite book</ref> The text of Chronicles identifies him as the brother of Azel.

EthnanEdit

Ethnan, the son of Ashur the father of Tekoa, is a figure who appears in a genealogy of the Tribe of Judah in 1 Chronicles 4:7. He may be included in the genealogy to represent Ithnan, a Judahite city mentioned in Joshua 15:23.<ref name="cb ethnan">Template:Cite book</ref>

EthniEdit

See Ethni.

EviEdit

Evi was one of five Midianite kings killed during the time of Moses by an Israelite expedition led by Phinehas, son of Eleazar according to Numbers 31:8 and Joshua 13:21.

EzbonEdit

Ezbon is the name of two people mentioned in the Bible:

EzrahEdit

Ezrah is the father of Jether, Mered, Epher and Jalon, grandfather (through Mered) of Miriam, Shammai and Ishbah, and great-grandfather (through Ishbah) of Eshtemoa (Template:Bibleverse-lb)

GEdit

Template:Compact TOC

GadEdit

Gad, is mentioned as a prophet of David in Samuel 22 and 24. In 1 Chronicles 21 he is a seer who kept a chronicle of David's acts. 2 Chronicles 29:25 mentions Nathan as David's prophet and Gad as his seer.

GaddiEdit

Gaddi, the son of Susi of the House of Manasseh, was a scout sent to Canaan prior to the crossing of the Jordan River according to Numbers 13:11.

GaddielEdit

Gaddiel, the son of Sodi of the house of Zebulun, was a scout sent to Canaan prior to the crossing of the Jordan River according to Numbers 13:10.

GahamEdit

Gaham, was the second son of Nahor through his concubine, Reumah. Nothing else is known about this individual except for a certain genealogy in Template:Bibleverse.

GamalielEdit

Gamaliel, son of Pedahzur was leader of the tribe of Manasseh, one of the leaders of the tribes of Israel, mentioned several times in the Book of Numbers.

GamulEdit

Gamul (Template:Langx; "rewarded" or "recompense") was head of the twentieth of twenty-four priestly divisions instituted by King David.<ref>Template:Bibleverse-lb</ref>

GatamEdit

Gatam is a name which appears in Genesis and Chronicles in a genealogy of the Edomites. In Genesis 36:11 and 1 Chronicles 1:36, Gatam is described the "son" of Eliphaz, the son of Esau (who is according to the Bible the forefather of the Edomites). In the passages which describe Gatam as a "son" of Eliphaz, he is listed alongside his "brothers": Teman, Omar, Zepho, and Kenaz according to Genesis; a similar but slightly larger list of brothers in Chronicles (Chronicles includes Amalek as a brother of Gatam). However, in Genesis 36:16, Gatam and Amalek (along with a previously unmentioned Korah) are described not as individual sons but as "clans" of Eliphaz.<ref name="cb gatam">Template:Cite book</ref>

GazezEdit

In the Masoretic Text of the Hebrew Bible, two individuals by the name of Gazez appear in 1 Chronicles 2:46. However, the Peshitta includes only one Gazez, and at least one biblical scholar has suggested that the second Gazez may have been included in the Masoretic Text by mistake.<ref name="cb gazez">Template:Cite book</ref>

1. Gazez was the son of Haran, grandson of Caleb, a descendant of Jacob. His paternal grandmother was Ephah, wife of Caleb. (Template:Bibleverse)

2. Gazez was a brother of Caleb, and uncle of 1. Gazez. (Template:Bibleverse)

GeberEdit

Geber (Hebrew: גבר, geber), son of Uri, was one of King Solomon's regional administrators; his territory was Gilead. (First Kings 4:19)

GemalliEdit

Gemalli of the house of Dan was the father of Ammiel, a scout sent to Canaan prior to the crossing of the Jordan River according to Numbers 13:4.

GemariahEdit

Gemariah (Hebrew: גמריה) is the name of at least two biblical characters:

  • Gemariah son of Shaphan in chapter 36 of Jeremiah. His own son Micaiah hears Jeremiah's secretary Baruch read Jeremiah's prophecies against the nation, and reports to a meeting of the court officials, including his father, nearby. This leads to the scroll being read before king Jehoiakim, who cuts it up and burns it despite the protestations of Gemariah and Elnathan ben Achbor.<ref>Jeremiah 36:25.</ref>
  • Gemariah son of Hilkiah, one of the envoys whom King Zedekiah sent to Babylonia (Jeremiah 29:3) Nothing else is known of him; he was hardly the brother of Jeremiah, whose father was also named Hilkiah.<ref name="The Interpreter's Bible 1951"/>

GenubathEdit

Genubath (Hebrew: גנבת genubat "Stolen" <ref>Hitchcock's Bible Dictionary of Names</ref>) is mentioned in 1 Kings 11:20 as the son born to Hadad the Edomite and the sister of Queen Tahpenes, Pharaoh's wife.

GeraEdit

Hebrew: גרא Gera'

GeuelEdit

Geuel, the son of Machi of the Tribe of Gad, was a scout sent to Canaan prior to the crossing of the Jordan River according to Numbers 13:16.

GinathEdit

Ginath is a name which is mentioned only in passing in a narrative describing the struggle for kingship between Omri and Tibni.<ref name="cb ginath">Template:Cite book</ref> Tibni is referred to in 1 Kings 16:21 and 22 as "son of Ginath," which taken literally, could be read as implying that a person named Ginath was Tibni's father.<ref name="cb ginath" /> However, the Encyclopaedia Biblica suggests that the term "Ginath" is a place-name or clan-name, so that "Tibni son of Ginath" has the meaning "Tibni of Ginath."<ref name="cb ginath" />

GideoniEdit

Gideoni (Hebrew: גִּדְעֹנִי) was a member of the tribe of Benjamin according to Numbers 1:11. He was the father of Abidan, a tribal chief. He is mentioned five times in the Book of Numbers, with each reference stating his relation to Abidan (Template:Bibleverse, Template:Bibleverse, Template:Bibleverse, Template:Bibleverse, Template:Bibleverse.)<ref name=":0" /> His name is variously understood as meaning "one with a disabled hand," "a youth," or "one who cuts down trees."<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref>

GiddaltiEdit

Giddalti was one of the sons of Heman the Levite (Template:Bibleverse), and chief of the twenty-two division of the temple musicians 1 Chronicles 25:29. He was also a Kohathite Levi.

GilalaiEdit

Gilalai is the name of a priest who participated as a musician in a procession led by Ezra.<ref>Nehemiah 12:36.</ref><ref name="cb gilalai">Template:Cite book</ref>

GinnethoiEdit

Ginnethoi or Ginnethon (Hebrew גִּנְּתוֹן 'Ginnĕtôi' Meaning: gardener) was one of the priests who sealed the covenant according to Template:Bibleverse and perhaps the same as in Template:Bibleverse.

GishpaEdit

Gishpa, (KJV Gispa) was one of two leaders of the Nethinim who lived in Ophel, according to Nehemiah 11:21. There are no other mentions of the name anywhere else in the Bible.<ref name="cb gispa">Template:Cite book</ref>

GogEdit

Gog (Hebrew: גּ֥וֹג) the Reubenite (separate from Gog and Magog), is the son of Shema, father of Shimei 1 Chronicles 5:4.

GuniEdit

Guni was a son of Naphtali according to Genesis 46:24 and Numbers 26:48. He was one of the 70 people to migrate to Egypt with Jacob according to the narrative.

HEdit

Template:Compact TOC

HaahashtariEdit

Haahashtari or Ahashtari was one of the sons of Naarah, one of the two wives of Asshur (1 Chronicles 4:6). Because the name is used to refer to a family of Judahites who descend from Judah via Ashhur, Thomas Kelly Cheyne believed that the name "Haahashtari" arose from a confusion between Ha-Ashhuri ("the Ashhurite") with the obscure term ahashtranim which appears in Esther 8:10.<ref name="cb haahashtari">Template:Cite book</ref>

HabaiahEdit

Habaiah (also called Hobaiah or Obdia) was the name given to a priestly family mentioned in Ezra 2:61: the b'ne habayah (literally "sons/descendants of Habaiah").<ref>This information comes from Ezra 2:59–62.</ref><ref name="cb habaiah">Template:Cite book</ref> Along with the families Hakkoz and Barzillai, the Habaiah family were priests whose names were not registered in the official genealogical records.<ref>Ezra 2:59–62.</ref> As a result, Ezra ruled that their rights to serve as priests would be restricted until such time as a high priest could decide, using the oracular Urim and Thummim, whether they had divine approval to serve as priests.<ref>Ezra 2:63.</ref>

The name "Habaiah" means "Yahweh hides" or "Yahweh protects," and appears in manuscripts of the Greek Septuagint in the forms Labeia, Obaia, Odogia, Ebeia, Ab(e)ia, Obbeia, and Obdia. <ref name="cb habaiah" />

HabazziniahEdit

Habazziniah or Habaziniah was either the head of a family of Rechabites (Jeremiah 35:3), or else a place name for the location that a Rechabite lived.<ref name="cb habaziniah">Template:Cite book</ref> According to Cheyne and Black, it may have been a scribal error where the name "Kabzeel," a place in the territory of Judah, was originally intended."<ref name="cb habaziniah" />

HachmoniEdit

Hachmoni or Hakmoni is mentioned in passing in 1 Chronicles 27:32, which records that his son Yechiel, a scribe, tutored David's sons.<ref name="cb hachmoni">Template:Cite book</ref>

HadadezerEdit

According to I Kings 11:23, Hadadezer (Hebrew: הדדעזר hadad'ezer "Hadad helps"<ref>Easton's Bible Dictionary</ref>) was king of Zobah.

HaddadEdit

Haddad the Edomite was an adversary of Solomon (1 Kings 10:14).

HadlaiEdit

Hadlai is mentioned in 2 Chronicles 28:12 as an Ephraimite, and the father of Amasa. In manuscripts of the Greek Septuagint, his name is given as Choab, Addi, or Adli.<ref name="cb hadlai">Template:Cite book</ref>

HagabEdit

Hagab (also Agaba, Accaba) is identified as the ancestor of a family of Nethinim, or temple assistants, who returned from the Babylonian exile.<ref name="cb hagab">Template:Cite book</ref> They appear in a list with other returnees in Ezra 2:46, but are omitted in the corresponding place in Nehemiah 7:48. A Hellenized version of this name appears in a similar context in 1 Esdras 5:30.<ref name="cb hagab" /> In the New Testament, a prophet who appears in Acts 11:28 and 21:10 is named Agabus, a variant on the name Hagab.<ref name="cb hagab" />

Hagab is a different character from Hagabah, which appears in the preceding verse.

HagabahEdit

Hagabah (also Hagaba, Graba, or Aggaba) is identified as the ancestor of a family of Nethinim, or temple assistants, who returned from the Babylonian captivity. They appear in a list with other returnees in Ezra 2:45, Nehemiah 7:48, and 1 Esdras 5:29.<ref name="cb hagabah">Template:Cite book</ref>

HaggiahEdit

Haggiah, of the tribe of Levi through Merari, is described in Template:Bibleverse being the son of Shimea and the father of Asaiah, one of the last contemporaries of David.

HaggiEdit

Haggi was a son of Gad according to Genesis 46:16 and Numbers 26:15. He was one of the 70 persons to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

HajehudijahEdit

See Jehudijah.

HakkatanEdit

Hakkatan (also Acatan, Akatan), meaning "the small one," is listed as the father of Johanan, a leader of the descendants of Azgad in Ezra 8:12 and 1 Esdras 8:38.<ref name="cb hakkatan">Template:Cite book</ref> Other than these two verses, the name Hakkatan appears nowhere in the Bible.<ref name="cb hakkatan" />

HakkozEdit

Hakkoz is the name of two or three biblical individuals:

HalloheshEdit

Hallohesh or Halohesh is a name which is used twice in the Bible.<ref name="cb halohesh">Template:Cite book</ref> In a list of workers building the wall of Nehemiah, a man named "Shallum son of Hallohesh" is mentioned as having a leadership role.<ref>Nehemiah 3:12.</ref> Also in the Book of Nehemiah, a person named Hallohesh is recorded as affixing his seal (an ancient form of signature) to Ezra's covenant between God and the people living around Jerusalem.<ref>Nehemiah 12:24, or verse 25 in some Bibles.</ref>

Thomas Kelly Cheyne believed that the name Hallohesh was a miswritten version of the name Hash-shilhi, (Shilhi).<ref name="cb halohesh" />

HammedathaEdit

Hammedatha was an Agagite and the father of Haman (see Template:Bibleverse).

HammolekethEdit

Hammoleketh or Hammolecheth is the sister of Machir, the eponymous ancestor of the tribe or clan of Machir (biblical region) Machir, which is reckoned as a part of the tribe of Manasseh in 1 Chronicles 7. The name appears to mean "she who reigns" if it is not a scribal error for some other name, such as Beth-Milcah.<ref name="cb hammoleketh">Template:Cite book</ref>

HammelechEdit

Hammelech, in the King James Version is the name of the father of Jerahmeel (Jeremiah 36:26), and it is the name of the father of Malkijah (Jeremiah 38:6). In a number of more recent translations, the Hebrew ha-melekh is taken as the common noun "the king" instead of the proper noun "Hammelech."<ref>For example, NIV, ESV, NASB, HCSB, JPS (1917), and RV.</ref>

HamorEdit

Hamor was the father of Shechem. Shechem defiled Dinah, according to Genesis 34

HamulEdit

Hamul was a son of Pharez of the Tribe of Judah according to Genesis 46:12 and Numbers 26:21. He was one of the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

HamutalEdit

Hamutal was the daughter of Jeremiah of Libnah and, the wife of King Josiah who bore him Jehoahaz and Zedekiah. She is mentioned in the following passages: Template:Bibleverse, Template:Bibleverse and Template:Bibleverse.

HanameelEdit

Hanameel or Hanamel (Hebrew: חנמאל, which means "Grace From God"),<ref name="Hitchcock, Roswell D 1869">Hitchcock, Roswell D. "Entry for 'Hanameel'". "An Interpreting Dictionary of Scripture Proper Names", New York, N.Y., 1869.</ref> a cousin of Jeremiah from whom the latter bought a field at Anathoth in Jeremiah 32:5–16.

HananiahEdit

Hananiah (Hebrew: חנניה, which means "My Grace is the Lord")<ref name="Hitchcock, Roswell D 1869"/> is the name of several biblical characters:

  • Hananiah son of Zerubbabel, the father of Jeshaiah, was a descendant of David.
  • Hananiah son of Azur, a prophet in the time of king Zedekiah. He prophesied a return from the exile in Babylon within two years and was denounced by Jeremiah as a false prophet as a result. He died within a year of the denunciation.<ref>Jeremiah chapter 28.</ref>
  • Hananiah, appointed by Nehemiah, jointly with Hanani, to be responsible for the security of Jerusalem after its walls had been rebuilt. Nehemiah described him as "a faithful man [who] feared God more than many".<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref>

HannielEdit

Hanniel Prince of the tribe of Manasseh; one of those appointed by Moses to superintend the division of Canaan amongst the tribe (Num. 34:23).

HanochEdit

Hanoch is the name of two biblical figures:<ref name="cb hanoch">Template:Cite book</ref>

  1. A son of Midian, the eponymous forefather of the Midianites.<ref name="Genesis 25:4, 1 Chronicles 1:33">Genesis 25:4, 1 Chronicles 1:33.</ref>
  2. A son of Reuben, the eponymous forefather of the Tribe of Reuben.<ref>Genesis 46:9, Exodus 6:14, Numbers 26:5, 1 Chronicles 5:3.</ref>

According to Cheyne and Black, the presence of this clan name in the genealogies of Reuben and Midian may indicate that the clan Hanoch was considered a part of the Tribe of Reuben but had a Midianite origin.<ref name="cb hanoch" />

HappizzezEdit

Happizzez or Aphses was a priest who fell on the eighteenth lot out of the twenty-four lots ordained by David for the temple service. (Template:Bibleverse)

HaranEdit

Haran or Aran refers to three minor characters in the Hebrew Bible:

  1. Haran (Template:LangxHārān), son of Terah, from Ur of the Chaldees. He fathered Lot, Milcah and Iscah. (Template:Bibleverse)
  2. Haran (Template:LangxḤārān), son of Caleb, a descendant of Jacob, and Ephah his mother. Father of 1.Gazez, and brother of 2.Gazez. (Template:Bibleverse)
  3. Haran (Template:LangxHārān), son of Shimei, a Levite who lived in the age of King David and played one of the important religious or political roles set out in Template:Bibleverse.

HarbonaEdit

Harbona or Harbonah is the name given for one of the eunuchs of king Ahasuerus in Esther 1:10 and 7:9.<ref name="cb harbona">Template:Cite book</ref>

HarephEdit

Hareph, according to 1 Chronicles 2:51, was a descendant of Caleb and the father of Beth-gader.<ref name="cb hareph">Template:Cite book</ref> The name "Hareph" in this case may refer to a group of people otherwise referred to by the term Hariphite.<ref name="cb hariph">Template:Cite book</ref>

HarhaiahEdit

Harhaiah, in the Masoretic Text of Nehemiah 3:8, is mentioned in passing, as being the father of Uzziel, a man responsible for the repair of part of the wall of Jerusalem. The awkward phrasing of the verse suggested to Stanley A. Cook (1899) that there had been some scribal mishandling of the verse, and that the verse originally did not contain the name "Harhaiah."<ref name="cb harhaiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

HarhasEdit

Harhas, according to 2 Kings 22:14 and 2 Chronicles 34:22, was an ancestor of Shallum, the husband of the prophetess Huldah. However, where the Book of Kings has "Harhas," the Book of Chronicles reads "Hasrah."<ref>2 Chronicles 34:22.</ref><ref name="cb hasrah">Template:Cite book</ref>

HarimEdit

Template:Redirect Harim (Template:Langx; "destroyed" or "dedicated to God") was the name of three biblical patriarchs:

HarnepherEdit

Harnepher appears only once in the Bible, in 1 Chronicles 7:36, in a passage which surveys the descendants of Asher.<ref name="cb harnepher">Template:Cite book</ref> The name may be of Egyptian origin, meaning "Horus is good."<ref name="cb harnepher" />

HarumEdit

Harum is recorded as the father of Aharhel in 1 Chronicles 4:8, which lists him as an ancestor of several clans in the Tribe of Judah.

HarumaphEdit

Harumaph is listed as the father of Jedaiah, a man responsible for making repairs to a part of Nehemiah's wall. He is only mentioned once in the Bible, in Nehemiah 3:10.<ref name="cb harumaph">Template:Cite book</ref>

HaruzEdit

Haruz (Hebrew: חרוז) was the father of Queen Meshullemeth. According to Template:Bibleverse he was a citizen who dwelt in the land of Jotbah.

HasadiahEdit

Hasadiah is listed as one of the sons of Zerubabel in 1 Chronicles 3:20, and is therefore a member of the royal lineage of the Judahite kings.

HashabiahEdit

Hashabiah is a biblical name which appears frequently for individuals mentioned both before and after the Babylonian captivity.<ref name="cb hashabiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

Because the name often appears in lists without any detailed description, it is sometimes difficult to tell whether different verses that use the name are referring to the same Hashabiah or to distinct persons.<ref name="cb hashabiah" /> The following list of nine individuals is the number listed in the Encyclopaedia Biblica, although the encyclopedia does not claim that precisely nine people of this name are mentioned:

  1. A Levite of the Merarite group, mentioned 1 Chronicles 6:45 (verse 30 in some Bibles).
  2. Hashabiah son of Bunni, a Merarite Levite listed as living in Jerusalem in 1 Chronicles 9:14 and Nehemiah 11:15.
  3. A leader of a large group of people in the time of David.<ref>1 Chronicles 26:30.</ref>
  4. A musician, one of the musicians appointed by David for the musical service of the Temple.<ref>1 Chronicles 25:3, 19.</ref>
  5. Hashabiah son of Kemuel, identified as the leader of the Levites in the time of David.<ref>1 Chronicles 27:17.</ref>
  6. A Levite leader in the time of Josiah.<ref>2 Chronicles 35:9.</ref>
  7. A Levite identified as having signed the covenant between Ezra and God.<ref>Ezra 8:19.</ref>
  8. A ruler listed as one of the people responsible for repairing the wall of Jerusalem in Nehemiah 3:17.
  9. The ruler of the clan of Hilkiah, according to Nehemiah 12:21.

HashabnahEdit

Hashabnah is the name given for one of the men who signed the covenant between the people of Judah and God in Nehemiah 10:25 (verse 26 in some Bibles). According to Cheyne and Black, the name is likely a miswritten form of "Hashabniah."<ref name="cb hashabnah">Template:Cite book</ref>

HashubEdit

Hashub is mentioned in passing as the father of Shemaiah, a Levite who is listed among those living in Jerusalem after the end of the Babylonian captivity.<ref>1 Chronicles 9:14.</ref>

HashubahEdit

Hashubah is listed as one of the children of Zerubabel, the governor of Yehud Medinata.<ref>1 Chronicles 3:20.</ref>

HasrahEdit

Hasrah, according to 2 Chronicles 34:22, is the name of an ancestor of Shallum, the husband of the prophetess Huldah. However, where the Book of Chronicles has "Hasrah", 2 Kings 22:14 has "Harhas".<ref name="cb hasrah"/>

HassenaahEdit

The sons of Hassenaah built the Fish Gate during the reconstruction of the walls of Jerusalem under the repair programme led by Nehemiah.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref>

HasuphaEdit

Hasupha (Hashupha in the King James Version) is the name of a clan or family of Nethinim (temple assistants) listed in Nehemiah 7:46 and Ezra 2:43.

HathachEdit

Hathach or Hatach is the name of one of the eunuchs of Ahasuerus in the Book of Esther. He acts as a messenger between Esther and Mordecai.<ref>Esther 4:5–10.</ref>

HathathEdit

Hathath is only mentioned in 1 Chronicles 4:13, in a genealogical passage where he is the son of Othniel, the son of Kenaz.<ref name="cb hathath">Template:Cite book</ref>

HattilEdit

The descendants of Hattil (also called Agia or Hagia) are listed in Ezra 2:57 and Nehemiah 7:59 as a group of people returning from the Babylonian captivity (see Ezra–Nehemiah). They are categorized by Ezra as being descendants of "Solomon's servants" (see Nethinim). In the Greek text of 1 Esdras 5:34, a closely related work, Hattil is referred to as Agia or Hagia.<ref name="cb hattil">Template:Cite book</ref>

HazaiahEdit

Hazaiah is a figure mentioned in passing in Nehemiah 11:5 as an ancestor Maaseiah, a notable leader of the Tribe of Judah in Yehud Medinata.<ref>Nehemiah 11:5.</ref>

HazoEdit

Hazo was the fifth son of Nahor and Milcah (Template:Bibleverse-lb).

HeberEdit

Heber or Chéver (Template:Hebrew Name 2) is a name referring to two persons.

HebronEdit

Hebron: see Template:Bibleverse

HelEdit

Hel was a son of Gilead of the Tribe of Manasseh according to Numbers 26:30 and Joshua 17:2.

HelahEdit

Helah was one of the two wives of Ashur the son of Hezron mentioned in Template:Bibleverse. Ashur's sons through Helah his wife were: Zereth, Jezoar and Ethnan.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref>

HeldaiEdit

Heldai is the name of two biblical figures.<ref name="cb heldai">Template:Cite book</ref> According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica, it should most likely be given alternate vowels as Holdai or Huldai.<ref name="cb heldai" />

  1. Heldai son of Baanah the Netophathite is listed as one of David's Mighty Warriors, and also in a list of military leaders given in 1 Chronicles 27:15. He is called "Heled" in 1 Chronicles 11:30, and "Heleb" in 2 Samuel 23:29.<ref name="cb heldai" />
  2. A Jew living in Babylonia, mentioned in Zechariah 6:10. He is called Helem in Zechariah 6:14.<ref name="cb heldai" />

HelezEdit

There are two biblical figures named Helez:

HelkaiEdit

Helkai is a name used in Nehemiah 12:15, in a list of priestly clan leaders in the "days of Joiakim."<ref>Nehemiah 12:12–21.</ref> The text refers to Helkai as leading a clan named Meraioth. According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica, the name is an abbreviated form of "Hilkiah."<ref name="cb helkai">Template:Cite book</ref>

HelonEdit

Helon was a member of the house of Zebulun according to Numbers 1:9. He was the father of Eliab.

HemamEdit

Hemam or Homam is the name of the son of Lotan and grandson of Seir the Horite, according to Genesis 36:22 and 1 Chronicles 1:39.

HenadadEdit

Henadad is a biblical name which appears only in Ezra–Nehemiah. In a passage which describes the rebuilding of the wall of Jerusalem, two "sons of Henadad", Bavai and Binnui, are named as taking responsibility for portions of the wall.<ref>Nehemiah 3:18 and 24.</ref> Binnui reappears later, where he is described as a Levite and as one of the signatories of the covenant between Ezra, God, and the people of Judah.<ref>Nehemiah 10:9.</ref> The "sons of Henadad," though without any specific individuals named, are mentioned in also in Ezra 3:9, a "difficult passage".<ref name="cb henadad">Template:Cite book</ref>

HepherEdit

Hepher was a son of Manasseh according to Numbers 26:32 and Joshua 17:2. See List of minor biblical places § Hepher.

HereshEdit

Heresh, along with Galal, Mattaniah and Bakbakkar, was a Levite and a descendant of Asaph described in Template:Bibleverse as one who returned from Babylon.

HezekiahEdit

Template:About Hezekiah is the name of three minor figures in the Hebrew Bible. In some Bibles the variant spellings Hizkiah and Hizkijah occur.

  • A son of Neariah and descendant of David mentioned in the royal genealogy of 1 Chronicles 3.<ref>Verse 22.</ref>
  • A figure mentioned in passing in Ezra 2:16 and Nehemiah 7:21, as the ancestor of some of the exiles who returned from the Babylonian captivity.
  • An ancestor of the prophet Zephaniah.<ref>Zephaniah 1:1.</ref>

HezirEdit

Hezir is the name of 2 biblical individuals in the Hebrew Bible.

HezronEdit

Hezron or Hetzron (Template:Hebrew Name) is the name of two men in Genesis.

HielEdit

Hiel the Bethelite (Heb. אֲחִיאֵל, חִיאֵל; "the [divine] brother, or kinsman, is God")<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>) rebuilt Jericho during the reign of King Ahab. (1 Kings 16:34)

Hillel of PirathonEdit

  • The father of Abdon, in the Book of Judges (Judges 12:13–15).

HiramEdit

Hiram (Hebrew: חירם Ḥiram) of Tyre, son of a widow of the tribe of Naphtali whose father was a craftsman in bronze, was given the metal work of King Soloman's temple. 1 Kings 7:13–14. According to The Interpreter's Bible, Hiram is a shortened form of אחירם (aḥîrām, "brother of Ram [the lofty one].")<ref>The Interpreter's Bible, Buttrick, 1954, Abingdon Press, Volume III, Snaith, p. 51.</ref>

HobabEdit

Hobab was Moses' brother-in-law (Template:Bibleverse-lb)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the son of Moses's father-in-law (Template:Bibleverse-lb), Jethro. The relevant part of Numbers 10:29 reads: "And Moses said unto Hobab, the son of Reuel the Midianite, Moses' father-in-law". Reuel (or Raguel) and Jethro may have been different persons from different narratives.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> That of Judges 4:11 reads: "Now Heber the Kenite had severed himself from the Kenites, even from the children of Hobab the brother-in-law of Moses". Moses invited Hobab to take part in the Exodus journey into the Promised Land, wanting to make use of his local knowledge, but Hobab preferred to return home to Midian (Template:Bibleverse-lb). Briefly, Hobab, Reuel/Raguel, and Jethro were all Moses' father-in-law,<ref name="Harris2010">Template:Cite book</ref> due to different traditions (and possibly corruptions of the text) which were syncretized in the interpretations of later commentators.<ref>Gunther Plaut, The Torah: A Modern Commentary, Union of American Hebrew Congregations, New York, 1981, p. 390:
"Reuel. In Exodus 3:1, 4:18, and ch. 18 he is called Jether and Jethro, and in Num. 10:29 we are told of 'Hobab, son of Reuel, Moses' father-in-law.' Tradition has attempted to harmonize these differences. Ibn Ezra, for instance, says that 'father' in V. 18 really means 'grandfather,' and that Hobab is another name for Jethro. Critical scholarship considers the divergences due to different traditions; thus, Jethro appears to be an older man with grown daughters, while Hobab is a potent wilderness guide (Num. 10:29–32)... It is also possible that the text originally read Hobab, son of Reuel."</ref>

HodEdit

Hod is a biblical name which appears only in 1 Chronicles 7:37.<ref name="cb hod">Template:Cite book</ref> He appears as one character in a genealogy of the Tribe of Asher.

HodaviahEdit

Hodaviah is the name of three individuals in the Bible.<ref name="cb hodaviah">Template:Cite book</ref> The Revised Version and King James Version of the Bible sometimes spell it as Hodaiah, Hodevah, or Hodeiah.<ref name="cb hodaviah" />

  • Hodaviah, a clan leader in the Tribe of Manasseh, according to 1 Chronicles 5:24.
  • Hodaviah son of Hassenuah appears as the ancestor of a Benjamite man living in Jerusalem after the Babylonian captivity.<ref>1 Chronicles 9:7.</ref> This Hodaviah is called "Judah son of Hassenuah" in Nehemian 11:9.<ref name="cb hodaviah" />
  • Hodaviah son of Elioenai is described as a descendant of Zerubbabel in 1 Chronicles 3:24

HodeshEdit

Hodesh is a figure who appears in a genealogy of the Tribe of Benjamin in Chronicles.<ref>1 Chronicles 8:9.</ref> The name might mean "born at the feast of the new moon," or else it may be a misspelling of Ahishahar.<ref name="cb hodesh">Template:Cite book</ref>

HohamEdit

Hoham, according to the Book of Joshua, was the king of Hebron, defeated in Joshua's conquest.<ref>Joshua 10.</ref>

HomamEdit

See Hemam.

HonEdit

See On (biblical figure)

HoriEdit

Hori is the personal name of two biblical individuals, as well as being the Hebrew term for a Horite.

  • Hori of the house of Simeon was the father of Shaphat, a scout sent to Canaan prior to the crossing of the Jordan River according to Numbers 13:5.
  • Hori is recorded as the name of Lotan, the son of Seir the Horite, according to Genesis 36:22.

HoshamaEdit

Hoshama is the name of one of the seven sons of Jeconiah, according to 1 Chronicles 3:18, the only place in the Bible that refers to him.<ref name="cb hoshama">Template:Cite book</ref> It is a shortened version of the name "Jehoshama."<ref name="cb hoshama" />

HothamEdit

Hotham is the name for two individuals found in the BIble.<ref name="cb hotham">Template:Cite book</ref> A Hotham appears in a genealogy of the Tribe of Asher in 1 Chronicles 7:32, but this individual is referred to as "Helem" in verse 35.<ref name="cb hotham" /> Another Hotham, though the KJV calls him Hothan, can be found in 1 Chronicles 11:44, where his sons Shama and Jeiel are listed among David's Mighty Warriors. This second Hotham is called an Aroerite.<ref name="cb hotham" />

HothirEdit

Hothir is listed as a son of David's "seer" Heman in 1 Chronicles 25:4 and 28.

HubbahEdit

See Jehubbah.

HuppahEdit

Huppah was a priest who was in charge of the 13th lot out of the twenty-four lots ordained by David. (Template:Bibleverse)

HuppimEdit

Huppim (חופים) or Hupham (חופם) was the ninth son of Benjamin in Genesis 46:21 and Numbers 26:39.

HushimEdit

Hushim, according to Genesis 46:23, was the name of the sons of Dan, listed among the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob. Numbers 26:42 calls Dan's son Shuham, and his descendants the Shuhamites. The Talmud names him as the murderer of Esau.<ref>Sotah 13a</ref>

HuzzabEdit

Huzzab is either a name or a word which appears in Nahum 2:7 (verse 8 in some Bibles). In a passage in which Nahum is predicting the fall of Nineveh, the prophet says, "Huzzab shall be led away captive" in the King James Version. However, a number of more contemporary versions since the late nineteenth century have interpreted the word as a verb, meaning "and it has been decreed."<ref name="cb huzzab">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>See also the New International Version and New Living Translation.</ref>

IEdit

Template:Compact TOC

IbharEdit

Ibhar was one of the sons of David. The name Ibhar means "Chosen".<ref>2 Samuel 5:15.</ref><ref>1 Chronicles 3:6.</ref>

IbneiahEdit

Ibneiah is the name given in Chronicles to a leader of a clan in the Tribe of Benjamin which returned to Yehud Medinata after the Babylonian captivity.<ref>1 Chronicles 9:8.</ref> The same character is referred to as "Gabbai" in the parallel passage in Nehemiah.<ref>Nehemiah 11:8.</ref><ref name="cb ibneiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

IbnijahEdit

Ibnijah is a figure who is mentioned indirectly in 1 Chronicles 9:8, by way of his descendant "Meshullam, son of Shephatiah, son of Reuel, son of Ibnijah." He was a Benjamite.<ref name="cb ibnijah">Template:Cite book</ref>

IbsamEdit

According to Chronicles, Ibsam was the son of Tola, who in turn was the son of Issachar.<ref>1 Chronicles 7:2.</ref> He is called Jibsam in the King James Version.<ref name="cb jibsam">Template:Cite book</ref>

IdbashEdit

Idbash, according to 1 Chronicles 4:3, was one of the sons of Etham, a figure who appears in the Chronicler's genealogy of the Tribe of Judah.

IgalEdit

Igal (יגאל) is the name of three biblical figures.

  • Igal son of Joseph of Issachar, a scout sent to Canaan prior to the crossing of the Jordan River according to Numbers 13:7.
  • Igal son of Nathan of Zobah is mentioned only in 2 Samuel 23:36 in a list of David's Mighty Warriors.
  • Igal son of Shemaiah is listed as a descendant of Zerubbabel in 1 Chronicles 3:22. This last figure is called Igeal in the King James Version, although his name in Hebrew is the same as the other two Igals.<ref name="cb igal">Template:Cite book</ref>

IgdaliahEdit

Igdaliah (Hebrew yigdalyahu) is mentioned in passing as the father of a man named Hanan in Jeremiah 35:3. According to the Book of Jeremiah, the sons or descendants of Hanan son of Igdaliah had their own chamber in the temple at Jerusalem, which was the site of the famous object-lesson concerning Jeremiah and the Rechabites.<ref>Jeremiah 35.</ref> The Encyclopaedia Biblica claimed that the name Igdaliah was most likely a mistaken form of the name Gedaliah.<ref name="cb igdaliah">Template:Cite book</ref>

IkkeshEdit

Ikkesh the Tekoite was the father of Ira, one of King David's Warriors (2 Samuel 23:26, 1 Chronicles 11:28).

IlaiEdit

See Zalmon (biblical figure).

ImlaEdit

Imla (Hebrew – ימלא, "whom God will fill up" <ref name="Smith's Bible Dictionary">Smith's Bible Dictionary</ref>), the father of Micaiah, which latter was the prophet who foretold the defeat of the allied kings of Judah and Israel against Ramoth-gilead (2 Chron 18:7–8). In the parallel passage (1 Kings 22:8–9) his name is written Imlah.

ImmerEdit

Immer was a member of the priestly family whose sons, Hanani and Zebadiah, had both taken pagan wives but repented during the communal confession instigated by the biblical priest Ezra.<ref>Ezra 10:20.</ref>

ImnaEdit

Imna is a biblical name which appears only in 1 Chronicles 7:35, in a genealogy of the Tribe of Asher.<ref name="cb imna">Template:Cite book</ref>

ImnahEdit

Imnah was a levite, the father of Kore, who was responsible for distributing the freewill offerings of the Temple in the time of King Hezekiah (Template:Bibleverse).

ImrahEdit

Imrah is a biblical name which appears only in 1 Chronicles 7:36, in a genealogy of the Tribe of Asher.<ref name="cb imrah">Template:Cite book</ref>

ImriEdit

Imri is the name of two individuals mentioned in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb imri">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • An Imri is mentioned in passing in the ancestry of a man named Uthai, who according to 1 Chronicles 9:4 lived in Jerusalem after the return from the Babylonian captivity.
  • A man named "Zakkur son of Imri" is recorded as taking responsibility for a section of the wall in the project of rebuilding the wall of Jerusalem, according to Nehemiah 3:2.

IphdeiahEdit

Iphdeiah (KJV Iphediah) is a name which appears very briefly as that of "Iphdeiah son of Shashak," mentioned only in a genealogy of the Tribe of Asher according to Chronicles.<ref>1 Chronicles 8:25.</ref><ref name="cb iphediah">Template:Cite book</ref>

IrEdit

See Iri (biblical figure).

Ira the JairiteEdit

Ira the Jairite was David's chief minister or priest after Sheba's rebellion.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref> While described as David's priest by the English Standard Version and New International Version, other translations describe Ira as David's chief ruler (King James Version) or his chief minister (New King James Version). The Hebrew word "כֹּהֵן" literally means "one officiating".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

IradEdit

In Template:Bibleverse-lb, Irad (Template:Langx – Template:'Īrāḏ), is the son of Enoch, the grandson of Cain and the father of Mehujael.

According to the Book of Moses (an LDS text), Irad discovers and publicises his great-grandson Lamech's (descendant of Cain) covenant with the Devil. As a result, Lamech kills Irad and subsequently suffers ostracization.

IramEdit

Iram is a name which appears in Genesis 36:43. In the Masoretic Text as it now stands, Iram is identified as a "tribal leader" (Hebrew alluph) of Edom. However, Thomas Kelly suggests that originally the text may have identified Iram and the other "tribal leaders" as the names not of individuals, but of clans, using the Hebrew word eleph to mean "clan."<ref name="cb iram">Template:Cite book</ref>

IriEdit

Iri, according to 1 Chronicles 7:7, was one of the sons of Bela, who was the son of Benjamin, eponymous founder of the Tribe of Benjamin. In verse 12, he is referred to simply as Ir.<ref name="cb iri">Template:Cite book</ref>

IrijahEdit

Irijah (Hebrew יראייה yiriyyah) is an official who arrests Jeremiah on suspicion of desertion.<ref>Jeremiah 37:13.</ref>

IruEdit

Iru is a name mentioned only once in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb iru">Template:Cite book</ref> In 1 Chronicles 4:15, Iru is listed as one of the sons of Caleb. The other two were Elah and Naam.

IscahEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Iscah or Jesca (Jessica) was a daughter of Haran, sister of Lot and Milcah according to Genesis 11:29.

IshbahEdit

For the "Ishbah, father of Eshtemoa" mentioned in 1 Chronicles, see List of minor biblical tribes § Ishbah.

Ishbi-benobEdit

Ishbi-benob is a name which appears in the Qere of the Masoretic Text at 2 Samuel 21:16.<ref name="cb ishbi-benob">Template:Cite book</ref> Qere is the term for the version of the text traditionally read aloud in synagogues. The Ketiv, the version written but not read aloud, reads somewhat differently, in a manner that suggested to Thomas Kelly Cheyne that the opening words of the verse were not the name of the giant, but words that indicated that David and his soldiers stayed in (the city of) Nob.<ref name="cb ishbi-benob" /> Whatever the case with the Ketiv, the Qere as it now stands asserts that Ishbi-benob was the name of a Philistine giant, who was killed by Abishai son of Zeruiah.<ref name="cb ishbi-benob" /><ref>2 Samuel 21:16–17.</ref> Gesenius interprets his name as meaning "dweller upon the height".<ref>Pulpit Commentary on 2 Samuel 21, accessed 19 August 2017.</ref> In Brenton's Septuagint Translation, his name is given as Jesbi, the progeny of Rapha.<ref>Brenton's Septuagint Translation, 2 Samuel 21:16.</ref>

IshhodEdit

Ishhod (King James Version Ishod) is a figure mentioned only once in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb ishod">Template:Cite book</ref> 1 Chronicles 7:18 lists Ishod as a son of Hammoleketh in a genealogy of the Tribe of Manasseh.

IshiEdit

Ishi is mentioned in Chronicles several times.<ref>Template:Bibleverse-lb</ref><ref>Template:Bibleverse-lb</ref><ref>Template:Bibleverse-lb</ref><ref>Template:Bibleverse-lb</ref>

IshiahEdit

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IshijahEdit

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IshmaelEdit

Ishmael was the name of 6 biblical individuals in the Hebrew Bible:

IshmaiahEdit

Ishmaiah (KJV Ismaiah) is the name of two biblical figures.<ref name="cb ishmaiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Ishmaiah son of Obadiah was the leader of the Tribe of Zebulun in the time of David, according to 1 Chronicles 27:19. He is called Samaias in the Septuagint.<ref name="cb ishmaiah" />
  • Ishmaiah the Gibeonite, according to 1 Chronicles 12:4, was one of David's Mighty Warriors.

IshmeraiEdit

Ishmerai is a biblical figure mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 8:18, where he is called "the son of Elpaal" in a genealogy of the Tribe of Benjamin.<ref name="cb ishmerai">Template:Cite book</ref> He may be the same character as the "Shemer" or "Shemed" mentioned in 1 Chronicles 8:12.<ref name="cb ishmerai" />

IshodEdit

See Ishhod.

IshpahEdit

Ishpah (KJV Ispah) is a name which appears in a genealogy of the Tribe of Benjamin.<ref>1 Chronicles 8:16.</ref><ref name="cb ispah">Template:Cite book</ref> According to 1 Chronicles 8, Ishpah was the son of Beriah, the son of Elpaal, the son of Shaharaim.<ref>1 Chronicles 8:8–13, 16–17.</ref>

IshpanEdit

Ishpan is a figure who appears only once in the Hebrew Bible, in a genealogical passage describing the people of the Tribe of Benjamin.<ref name="cb ishpan">Template:Cite book</ref> 1 Chronicles 8 calls him the son of Shashak, the son of Elpaal, the son of Shaharaim.<ref>See verses 8–11, 13–14, 22.</ref>

IshuahEdit

See Ishvah.

IshuaiEdit

See Ishvah.

IshuiEdit

See Ishvi.

IshvahEdit

Ishvah (KJV Ishuah and Isuah) was one of the sons of Asher according to Genesis 46:17 and 1 Chronicles 7:30, although he is missing from the list of the sons of Asher found in Numbers 26:44.<ref name="cb ishvah">Template:Cite book</ref>

IshviEdit

Ishvi (KJV Ishui, Isui, Jesui, and Ishuai) is the name of two figures in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb ishvi">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Ishvi is the name given to a son of Asher, eponymous founder of the Tribe of Asher, in Genesis 46:17, Numbers 26:44, and 1 Chronicles 7:30. His descendants are called Ishvites in Numbers 24:44. Genesis 46 places him in the list of 70 persons who went down into Egypt with Jacob, the father of Asher and the other eleven Tribes of Israel.
  • Ishvi is the name of a son of Saul in 1 Samuel 14:49.

IsmaiahEdit

See Ishmaiah.

IspahEdit

See Ishpah.

IsshiahEdit

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IsshijahEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

IsuiEdit

See Ishvi.

IthaiEdit

See Ittai.

IthmahEdit

Ithmah is a name which appears only once in the Hebrew Bible, in 1 Chronicles 11:46, where "Ithmah the Moabite" is listed as one of David's Mighty Warriors.<ref name="cb ithmah">Template:Cite book</ref>

IthranEdit

Ithran is the name given for two figures in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb ithran">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Ithran, son of Dishon, son of Anah, son of Zibeon, son of Seir the Horite.<ref>See Genesis 36:26 and in the parallel passage, 1 Chronicles 1:41.</ref> This Ithran represents the name of a Horite clan.<ref name="cb ithran" />
  • Ithran, son of Zophah, son of Helem appears in a genealogy of the Tribe of Asher.<ref>1 Chronicles 7:37.</ref> The Encyclopaedia Biblica identifies the "Jether" of 1 Chronicles 7:38 as probably being identical to this Ithran.<ref name="cb ithran" />

IthreamEdit

Ithream (יתרעם, "abundant people")<ref>James Orr,International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, 1915.</ref> was the son of David and Eglah, David's sixth son, according to 2 Samuel 3:5.

IttaiEdit

Ittai (and once in Chronicles, Ithai) is the name given one or two biblical figures:

  • Ittai the Gittite appears alongside 600 soldiers as a Philistine ally of David in the time leading up to Absalom's rebellion.<ref name="cb ittai">Template:Cite book</ref> Having only recently arrived in Jerusalem, David gives him an option to return home to Gath, but Ittai confirms his loyalty to David and helps him evacuate the city.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref> During the rebellion itself, he serves as commander of a third of David's army.<ref name="cb ittai" />
  • Ittai "son of Ribai, from Gibeah, of the children of Benjamin" is listed as one of David's Mighty Warriors.<ref>2 Samuel 23:29.</ref> His association with Gibeah and the Tribe of Benjamin "probably" distinguish him from the Gittite Ittai, according to Stanley Arthur Cook.<ref name="cb ittai" /> This Benjamite Ittai is once called Ithai in 1 Chronicles 11:31.<ref name="cb ittai" />

IzharEdit

For the Levitical clan, see Izhar.

Izhar son of Hela is a figure who appears in a genealogy of the Tribe of Judah, in 1 Chronicles 4:7. He is called Izhar according to the variant reading known as Qere. According to the Ketiv his name is Zohar. The King James Version calls him Jezoar.

IzrahiahEdit

Izrahiah (Jezrahiah) is the name of two biblical figures.

  • Izrahiah son of Uzzi, son of Tola, son of Issachar appears in a genealogy of the Tribe of Issachar.<ref>1 Chronicles 7:3.</ref>
  • Izrahiah (KJV Jezrahiah) is, according to Nehemiah 12:42, a leader of singers in a procession headed by Nehemiah.

IzriEdit

Izri (Zeri) appears in a list of persons responsible for liturgical music in the time of David, according to 1 Chronicles 25:11. In 1 Chronicles 25:3, he is called Zeri.<ref name="cb izri">Template:Cite book</ref>

IzziahEdit

Izziah (KJV Jeziah), a descendant of Parosh, is listed as one of the men who married foreign wives in the time of Nehemiah.<ref>Ezra 10:25.</ref>

JEdit

Template:Compact TOC

JaanaiEdit

See Janai (biblical figure). See Djenne'.

JaareshiahEdit

Jaareshiah (KJV Jaresiah) is a name which appears only Template:Bibleverse, where Jaaresiah is identified as one of the sons of Jeroham.<ref name="cb jaresiah">Template:Cite book</ref> The text does not identify any information about Jeroham's parentage, but the passage is part of a genealogy of the Tribe of Benjamin.<ref name="cb jaresiah" />

JaasaiEdit

See Jaasu.

JaasauEdit

See Jaasu.

JaasielEdit

Jaasiel (Jasiel) is the name of one of David's Mighty Warriors.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref> He is referred to in Hebrew as hammitsovayah, which has been variously translated as "the Mezobaite," "the Mesobaite," or "from Zobah."<ref name="cb jaasiel">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>"Mesobaite" in the King James Version, "Mezobaite" in the Revised Version and New International Version, "from Zobah" in the New Living Translation.</ref> A "Jaasiel son of Abner" is listed as a Benjamite leader in 1 Chronicles 27:21, who may be the same person.<ref name="cb jaasiel" />

JaasuEdit

Jaasu (also called Jaasau, Jaasai) is a name which appears in a list of men alleged to have married foreign women in the time of Nehemiah.<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref>

JaaziahEdit

Jaaziah is listed as one of the sons of Merari in a passage discussing the various divisions of Levites.<ref>1 Chronicles 24:26–27.</ref>

JaazielEdit

Jaaziel is the name of a Levite musician who appears in 1 Chronicles 15:18. He reappears as "Aziel" in 15:20.<ref name="cb jaaziel">Template:Cite book</ref>

JacanEdit

Jacan (or Jachan) is a name which appears once in the Hebrew Bible, in a list of Gadites in Chronicles.<ref>1 Chronicles 5:13.</ref><ref name="cb jachan">Template:Cite book</ref>

JachinEdit

Jachin was the fourth son of Simeon according to Genesis 46:10, Exodus 6:15, and Numbers 26:12, one of the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

JadaEdit

Jada was one of the sons of Onam mentioned in 1 Chronicles 2:28, he had two sons Jonathan and Jether, and his brother was named Shammai. He was a descendant of Hezron.

JahathEdit

Jahath is the name of several individuals in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb jahath">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Jahath son of Reaiah, son of Shobal, descendant of Judah is mentioned in Template:Bibleverse, in a genealogical passage describing the Tribe of Judah.
  • Jahath is a name applied to various Levites in 1 Chronicles 6:20 (verse 5 in some Bibles), 6:43 (verse 28 in some Bibles), 23:10, 24:22; and 2 Chronicles 34:12.<ref name="cb jahath" />

JahaziahEdit

See Jahzeiah.

JahleelEdit

Jahleel was a son of Zebulun according to Genesis 46:14 and Numbers 26:26. He was one of the 70 persons to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

JahmaiEdit

For the Jahmai of 1 Chronicles 7:2, see List of minor biblical tribes § Jahmai.

JahzeelEdit

Jahzeel was a son of Naphtali according to Genesis 46:24 and Numbers 26:48. He was one of the 70 persons to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

JahzeiahEdit

Jahzeiah (KJV Jahaziah) son of Tikvah is one of the figures listed in the Book of Ezra as opposing Ezra's prohibition on marriages with foreign women.<ref>Ezra 10:15.</ref><ref name="cb jahaziah">Template:Cite book</ref>

JahzerahEdit

Jahzerah is a name which appears only in 1 Chronicles 9:12.<ref name="cb jahzera">Template:Cite book</ref> See Ahzai.

JairEdit

Jair, see Yair.

JakehEdit

Jakeh is a name that appears only in Proverbs 30:1, where part of the Book of Proverbs is ascribed to a man called "Agur son of Jakeh". Franz Delitzsch proposed that the name "Jakeh" means "scrupulously pious".<ref name="cb jakeh">Template:Cite book</ref>

JanaiEdit

Janai (Jaanai) is a name that appears only 1 Chronicles 5:12, where Janai is listed as a descendant of Gad. According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica, the name represents the name of a clan within the Tribe of Gad.<ref name="cb jaanai">Template:Cite book</ref>

JakimEdit

Template:About

Jakim is the name of one individual mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, as well as one individual mentioned in some manuscripts of the New Testament's Gospel of Matthew. In a genealogy of the Tribe of Benjamin, in 1 Chronicles 24:12, a Jakim appears, as the son of Shimei (who is referred to as Shema in verse 13).<ref name="cb jakim">Template:Cite book</ref> In some Greek manuscripts of Matthew, a Jakim appears between Josiah and Jechoniah in a genealogy of Jesus.<ref>Matthew 1:11.</ref><ref name="cb jakim" />

JalonEdit

Jalon was one of four sons of Ezrah, and the uncle of Miriam, Shammai and Ishbah (father of Eshtemoa). (Template:Bibleverse-lb)

JaminEdit

The name Jamin means right hand. There are four different Jamins in the Bible:

  1. The second son of Simeon according to Template:Bibleverse, Template:Bibleverse, and Template:Bibleverse. He was one of the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.
  2. Man of Judah, see Template:Bibleverse
  3. Post exile Levite who interpreted the law, see Template:Bibleverse
  4. The son of Ram the firstborn of Jerahmeel according to the book of 1 Chronicles.

JamlechEdit

Jamlech is a figure who appears once in the Hebrew Bible, in list of kin group leaders in the Tribe of Simeon, who according to the Bible lived in the time of Hezekiah and exterminated the Meunim.<ref>1 Chronicles 4:34–38.</ref><ref name="cb jamlech">Template:Cite book</ref>

JaphiaEdit

Japhia was the king of Lachish, one of the five kings of the Amorites whose battle against the settling Israelites led by Joshua is reported in Template:Bibleverse. Along with the other four kings, he was subsequently found in a cave at Makkedah, where he was killed and buried by Joshua and his forces (Template:Bibleverse). Not to be confused with the ancient Jewish town of Japhia/Japha.

JarahEdit

See Jehoaddah. meaning: honey, god gives honey, honeycomb, honeysuckle

JarebEdit

Jareb is a name which appears in Hosea 5:13 and 10:6 in some translations of the Bible.<ref>For example, see the King James Version, Revised Version, and New American Standard Bible.</ref> In both passages, the Hebrew text refers to a mlk yrb (KJV "King Jareb") in a way that implies that mlk yrb is the king of Assyria.<ref name="albrightjareb">Albright, W. F. "The Archaeological Background of the Hebrew Prophets of the Eighth Century". Journal of Bible and Religion, vol. 8, no. 3, 1940, p. 134..</ref> However, no Assyrian king by the name of "Jareb" is known to history, which has led to a variety of conjectures about what the phrase refers to.<ref name="cb jareb">Template:Cite book</ref> According to W. F. Albright, the "definitive solution" to the problem is that the text should read mlk rb or mlky rb, meaning "the great king", a Hebrew translation of the common Assyrian royal title sharru rabu.<ref name="albrightjareb" /> The proposed emendation to "great king" has been accepted in a number of biblical translations.<ref>For example, NIV, NLT, ESV, Holman, and NET</ref>

JaribEdit

Jarib is the name of three individuals in the Hebrew Bible, and a priest whose descendants are named in the First Book of Maccabees.

  • In 1 Chronicles 4:24, one of the sons of Simeon (son of Jacob) is called Jarib. In other passages, he is called Jachin.<ref name="cb jarib">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • A Jarib appears in a list of leaders recruited by Ezra to find Levites for the resettlement of Jerusalem.<ref>Ezra 8:16.</ref>
  • A priest by the name of Jarib is mentioned in a list of men who married foreign women in Ezra 10:18.
  • In 1 Maccabees 2:1 and 14:29, Mattathias and his son Simon are described as being "of the posterity of Jarib". The New English Translation of the Septuagint transliterates the name as Ioarib, while the New American Bible reads Joarib and the Good News Translation reads Jehoiarib.<ref>Template:Bibleverse: Good News Translation</ref>

JaresiahEdit

See Jaareshiah.

JarhaEdit

Jarha was an Egyptian slave of Sheshan who was married to Sheshan's daughter according to 1 Chronicles 2:34–35.

JasielEdit

See Jaasiel.

Jasub/JashubEdit

1. See Job, son of Issachar

2. See Shearjashub

3. A son of Bani in Ezra 10:29.

JathnielEdit

Jathniel is a minor biblical figure who appears only in 1 Chronicles 26:2, in a list of Korahite porters.<ref name="cb jathniel">Template:Cite book</ref>

JazizEdit

Jaziz the Hagrite, according to 1 Chronicles 27:31, was in charge of king David's flocks of sheep and goats.

JeatheraiEdit

See Ethni.

JecamiahEdit

See Jekamiah.

JecholiahEdit

Jecholiah (Hebrew: יכליהו, yekhalyahu) of Jerusalem was the wife of the King of Judah, Amaziah, and the mother of King Azariah.<ref>2 Kings 15:2.</ref> Depending on translation used, her name may also be spelled Jechiliah, Jecoliah, or Jekoliah. Also 2 Chronicles 26:3

JediaelEdit

There are three individuals in the Hebrew Bible named Jediael.<ref name="cb jediael">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Jediael son of Shimri is listed as one of David's warriors in 1 Chronicles 11:45.
  • Jediael, a man from the Tribe of Manasseh, appears in a list of warriors said to have deserted David when he went to Ziklag.<ref>1 Chronicles 12:20.</ref>
  • Jediael son of Meshelemiah appears in a list of Korahite porters in the time of David.<ref>1 Chronicles 26:2.</ref>

JeezerEdit

Jeezer was a son of Gilead of the Tribe of Manasseh according to Numbers 26:30.

JehallelelEdit

Jehallelel (KJV Jehaleleel or Jehalelel) is the name of two individuals in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb jehallelel">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • A Jehallelel appears in 1 Chronicles 4:16, in a genealogy of the Tribe of Judah.
  • Another Jehallelel appears in a list of Levites in 2 Chronicles 29:12.

JehdeiahEdit

Jehdeiah is the name of two individuals in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb jehdeiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • A Levite mentioned in 1 Chronicles 24:20.
  • Jehdeiah the Meronothite, who according to 1 Chronicles 27:30 was in charge of king David's donkeys.

JehezkelEdit

Jehezkel was the head of the twentieth lot out of the twenty-four lots ordained by David for the temple service in 1 Chronicles 24:16.

JehiahEdit

Jehiah is a figure who is only mentioned once in the Bible, in 1 Chronicles 15:24, which describes him as a gatekeeper for the Ark of the Covenant in the time of David.<ref name="cb jehiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

JehielEdit

This entry contains close paraphrases and borrowing of wording found in entries entitled "Jehiel" in the Encyclopaedia Biblica, a work which is now in the public domain.

Jehiel is the name of fourteen figures in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb jehiel">Template:Cite book</ref>

For eleven of these the English spelling "Jehiel" reflects the Hebrew name יחיאל:<ref name="cb jehiel" />

  • A Levite musician in the time of David (1 Chronicles 15:18, 20; 16:5).
  • The leader of a family of Gershonite Levites in the time of David, custodian of "the treasury of the house of the Lord" (1 Chronicles 23:8; 29:8).
  • Jehiel the son of Hachmoni, who was with David's sons (1 Chronicles 27:32).
  • Jehiel the son of king Jehoshaphat (2 Chronicles 21:2).
  • A Hemanite Levite in the time of Hezekiah, called Jehuel in the Revised Version (2 Chronicles 29:14).
  • A Levitical or priestly overseer of the temple in the time of Hezekiah (2 Chronicles 31:13).
  • A person referred to as "ruler of the house of God" in the time of Josiah (2 Chronicles 35:8).
  • The father of Obadiah in a post-exilic list of kin groups (Ezra 8:9).
  • The father of Shechaniah (Ezra 10:2).
  • Jehiel the son of Harim, a priest (Ezra 10:21).
  • Jehiel the son of Elam, a layman (Ezra 10:26).

For the other three, the name Jehiel (or Jeiel) reflects the Hebrew spelling יעיאל:

  • One of the sons of Elam (Ezra 10:2).
  • A Gibeonite described as the "father of Gibeon" in 1 Chronicles 9:35.
  • A son of Hothan the Aroerite, who along with his brother Shama was listed as one of David's Mighty Warriors in 1 Chronicles 11:44.

JehizkiahEdit

Jehizkiah son of Shallum is mentioned in a list of Ephraimite leaders who, according to 2 Chronicles 28, intervened along with the prophet Oded to prevent the enslavement of 200,000 people from the Kingdom of Judah during the time of the king Ahaz.<ref>Jehizkiah appears in the narrative in 2 Chronicles 28:12.</ref>

JehoaddahEdit

Joehoaddah (or Jehoadah, Jarah) was one of the descendants of King Saul, according to 1 Chronicles 8:33–36. In 1 Chronicles 9:42, which contains a copy of the same genealogy of Saul, his name is given as "Jarah."<ref name="cb jehoadah">Template:Cite book</ref>

JehoaddanEdit

Jehoaddan (Hebrew: יהועדן, Yehōaddān; "YHWH delights") was a native of Jerusalem, the wife of King Joash of Judah, and mother of his successor, King Amaziah. 2 Kings 14:2

JehoiadaEdit

Jehoiada (Hebrew: יהוידע,Yehoyada "The LORD Knows"<ref>Strong's</ref>) was the name of at least three people in the Hebrew Bible:

  • Jehoiada, a priest during the reigns of Ahaziah, Athaliah, and Joash (q.v.)
  • Jehoiada, father of Benaiah (cf. Benaiah)
  • Jehoiada, a priest in the time of Jeremiah (Jeremiah 29:26)

JehoshaphatEdit

Jehoshaphat (Hebrew: יהושפט, yehoshaphat, God Judges), son of Paruah, was one of King Solomon's twelve regional administrators: his jurisdiction was Issachar (1 Kings 4:17).

Jehosphaphat, son of Ahilud, was King Solomon's recorder (1 Kings 4:3).

JehozabadEdit

Jehozabad (Hebrew: יהוזבד, yehozabad) is the name of three figures in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb jehozabad">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Jehozabad son of Shomer was one of the assassinators of King Joash of Judah. 2 Kings 12:21. "This person is called Zabad, in 2 Chron. xxiv.26..." <ref name="Adam Clarke">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • Jehozabad, according 2 Chronicles 17:18, was a leader of 180,000 Benjamite warriors in the time of king Jehoshaphat.
  • Jehozabad is listed as one of the sons of Obed-edom according to 1 Chronicles 26:4.

JehubbahEdit

Jehubbah (or Hubbah) is the name of an individual who appears in a genealogy of the Tribe of Asher. His name depends on which variant reading (see Qere and Ketiv) of the Masoretic Text one follows: the Ketiv reads yhbh ("Jehubbah") the Qere reads whbh ("and Hubbah").<ref name="cb jehubbah">Template:Cite book</ref>

JehudiEdit

Jehudi (Hebrew יהודי "Judahite") "the son of Nethaniah, the son of Shelemiah, the son of Cushi" (Jeremiah 36:14) was one of the delegates the princes sent to fetch Baruch, Jeremiah's scribe, to read his scroll.

JehudijahEdit

Jehudijah (Template:Langx), mentioned in 1 Chronicles 4:18, is the name given to the wife of Mered, and is listed as the mother of his children.<ref name="cb jehudijah">Template:Cite book</ref> Some Rabbinic sources claim that Jehudijah, a feminine form of the Hebrew yehudi (Template:Langx), meaning "Jew," is to be used as a noun rather than a given name, interpreting the passage as "his wife, the Jewess" rather than "his wife, Jehudijah," and that it is referring to Pharaoh's daughter, Bithiah, who is mentioned in the same passage and is said to have converted to Judaism.<ref name="cb jehudijah" /> As Bithiah was an Egyptian, it would have been worth noting that she was a Jewess, especially given the importance of matrilineality in Judaism, though this was not the case in the Biblical era.

JehushEdit

See Jeush.

JeielEdit

Jeiel is the name of ten individuals in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb jeiel">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Jeiel, according to 1 Chronicles 5:7, was a leader in the Tribe of Reuben.
  • Jeiel, referred to as the "father of Gibeon", was an ancestor of King Saul.<ref>(Template:Bibleverse)</ref> The King James Version calls him "Jehiel."<ref name="cb jeiel" /> This figure's name is affected by variant readings preserved through the Qere and Ketiv system in the Masoretic Text: the Ketiv calls him "Jeuel," while the Qere calls him "Jeiel."<ref name="cb jeiel" />
  • Jeiel son of Hotham the Aroerite is listed as one of David's warriors in 1 Chronicles 11:44. The King James Version calls him "Jehiel." This figure's name is affected by variant readings preserved through the Qere and Ketiv system in the Masoretic Text: the Ketiv calls him "Jeuel," while the Qere calls him "Jeiel."<ref name="cb jeiel" />
  • A Jeiel is mentioned in passing in a list of gatekeepers for the Ark of the Covenant in 1 Chronicles 15:18.
  • A Jeiel is listed as one of the ancestors of a Levite named Jahaziel in 2 Chronicles 20:14.
  • A Jeiel was one of the scribes of Uzziah according to 2 Chronicles 26:11. This figure's name is affected by variant readings preserved through the Qere and Ketiv system in the Masoretic Text: the Ketiv calls him "Jeuel," while the Qere calls him "Jeiel."<ref name="cb jeiel" />
  • A Jeiel is recorded as a Levite in the time of Hezekiah. This figure's name is affected by variant readings preserved through the Qere and Ketiv system in the Masoretic Text: the Ketiv calls him "Jeuel," while the Qere calls him "Jeiel."<ref name="cb jeiel" /> The Revised Version calls him Jeuel, following the Ketiv.<ref name="cb jeiel" />
  • A Jeiel is recorded as a leader in the Tribe of Levi in time of Uzziah according to 2 Chronicles 35:9.
  • In a list of returnees to Yehud Medinata after the end of the Babylonian captivity, a Jeiel is recorded as being the head of a group of relatives according to Ezra 8:13. The Revised Version calls him Jeuel.
  • A Jeiel, of the "descendants of Nebo," is listed as one of the people opposing marriage to foreign women in the time of Nehemiah.<ref>Ezra 10:43.</ref>

JekameamEdit

Jekameam son of Hebron is mentioned in passing in two genealogical passages.<ref>1 Chronicles 23:19, 24:23.</ref>

JekamiahEdit

Jekamiah (KJV spelling Jecamiah) is the name of two individuals in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb jekamiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Jekamiah son of Shallum, son of Sismai, son of Eleasah, son of Helez, son of Azariah, son of Jehu, son of Obed, son of Ephlal, son of Zabad, son of Nathan, son of Attai, son of Jarha, the son-in-law and slave of Sheshan, son of Ishi, son of Appaim, son of Nadab, son of Shammai, son of Onam, son of Jerahmeel, the alleged ancestor of the Jerahmeelites.<ref>1 Chronicles 2.</ref>
  • Jekamiah, a son of Jeconiah, the last king of Judah, who was taken captive by the Babylonians.<ref>1 Chronicles 3:18.</ref>

JekoliahEdit

See Jecholiah.

JekuthielEdit

Jekuthiel, father of Zanoah, appears in 1 Chronicles 4:18, in a genealogical passage concerning the Tribe of Judah.<ref>1 Chronicles 4:18.</ref>

JemimaEdit

Jemimah, meaning "Dove" was a daughter of Job according to Job 42:14.

JemuelEdit

Jemuel was the first son of Simeon according to Genesis 46:10, Exodus 6:15, and Numbers 26:12. He was one of the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

JephunnehEdit

Jephunneh (יְפֻנֶּה) is a biblical name which means "for whom a way is prepared", and was the name of two biblical figures:

JerahEdit

Jerah was a son of Joktan according to Genesis 10:26, 1 Chronicles 1:20.

JeremaiEdit

Jeremai, one of the "descendants of Hashum," is a figure who appears only in Ezra 10:33, where he is listed among the men who married foreign women.<ref name="cb jeremai">Template:Cite book</ref>

JeriahEdit

See Jerijah.

JeriothEdit

Jerioth ירעות "Tent Curtains" was a wife of Caleb according to 1 Chronicles 2:18.

JerielEdit

Jeriel, son of Tola, son of Issachar, is found in a genealogy of the Tribe of Issachar in 1 Chronicles 7:2.

JerijahEdit

Jerijah (sometimes Jeriah) is listed is one of the sons of Hebron in genealogical passages in 1 Chronicles 23:19, 24:23, 26:31.<ref name="cb jerijah">Template:Cite book</ref>

JerohamEdit

There are 5 people in the Hebrew Bible named Jeroham.

  1. The Father of Elkanah, and grandfather of the prophet Samuel — in 1 Samuel 1:1.
  2. The father of Azareel, the "captain" of the tribe of Dan — in 1 Chronicles 27:22.
  3. A Benjamite mentioned in 1 Chronicles 12:7 and 1 Chronicles 9:12.
  4. The father of Azariah, one of the "commanders of the hundreds" who formed part of Jehoiada's campaign to restore the kingship to Joash in Template:Bibleverse
  5. A priest mentioned in 1 Chronicles 9:12; (perhaps the same as in Nehemiah 11:12).

JerushaEdit

Jerusha (or Jerushah) the daughter of Zadok was, according to the 2 Kings 15:33 and 2 Chronicles 27:1, the mother of king Jotham.

JesbiEdit

See Ishbi-benob

JeshaiahEdit

Jeshaiah may refer to multiple figures in the Bible:

  1. A descendant of David, the father of Rephaiah, and the son of Hananiah in 1 Chronicles 3:21.
  2. One of eight sons of Jeduthun in 1 Chronicles 25:3.
  3. For the man in 1 Chronicles 24 and 26 who is sometimes called Jeshaiah, see Jesiah.

JeshebeabEdit

Jeshebeab was a descendant of Aaron, who was assigned priestly duties by David. Out of the twenty-four, Jeshebeab was the head of the fourteenth lot according to Template:Bibleverse.

JesherEdit

Jesher the son of Caleb is mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 2:18.

JeshishaiEdit

Jeshishai is a figure mentioned only once, in passing, in a genealogy of Gad.<ref>1 Chronicles 5:14.</ref><ref name="cb jeshishai">Template:Cite book</ref>

JeshohaiahEdit

Jeshohaiah appears in a list of names of Simeonites. According to Chronicles these Simeonites took pasture-land from descendants of Ham and the Meunim during the time of king Hezekiah.<ref name="ReferenceB">The narrative is recorded in 1 Chronicles 4:34–43, with Jeshohaiah himself mentioned in verse 36.</ref> According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne, the name is a corruption of Maaseiah.<ref name="cb jeshohaiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

JesimielEdit

Jesimiel appears in a list of names of Simeonites. According to Chronicles these Simeonites took pasture-land from descendants of Ham and the Meunim during the time of king Hezekiah.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne, the name is a corruption of Maaseel.<ref name="cb jeshohaiah"/>

JesuiEdit

See Ishvi.

JetherEdit

Jether was the name of 5 biblical individuals:

JethethEdit

Jetheth is listed as one of the "chiefs" of Edom, in Genesis 36:41.

JeuelEdit

Jeuel son of Zerah appears in a list of people living in Jerusalem after the end of the Babylonian exile. For four other individuals who are sometimes called "Jeuel" and sometimes "Jeiel," see Jeiel.

JeushEdit

Jeush is the name of four or five individuals mentioned in the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="cb jeush">Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Jeush son of Esau.<ref>Genesis 36:5, 14, 18; 1 Chronicles 1:35.</ref> A variant manuscript reading, known as Ketiv, calls him Jeish.<ref name="cb jeush" />
  • Jeush son of Bilhan, son of Jediael, the son of Benjamin, mentioned in a genealogy which describes the people of the Tribe of Benjamin.<ref name="1 Chronicles 7:10"/>
  • Jeush son of Eshek, who is mentioned in a genealogy of the Tribe of Benjamin.<ref name="1 Chronicles 8:39"/> According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica, this is likely a reference to the same person called Jeush son of Bilhan. The King James Version calls him Jehush.
  • Jeush son of Shimei represented a division of Levites according to 1 Chronicles 23:10–11.
  • Jeush, the first listed son of king Rehoboam in 2 Chronicles 11:19.

JezerEdit

Jezer was a son of Naphtali according to Genesis 46:24 and Numbers 26:49. He was one of the 70 persons to migrate to Egypt with Jacob. According to Numbers he was the progenitor of the Jezerites.

JeziahEdit

See Izziah.

JezoarEdit

Jezoar was one of the sons of Helah and Ashur mentioned in Template:Bibleverse.

JezrahiahEdit

See Izrahiah.

JezreelEdit

One of the sons of the father of Etam according to Template:Bibleverse

JibsamEdit

See Ibsam.

JidlaphEdit

Jidlaph was the seventh son of Nahor and Milcah (Template:Bibleverse-lb).

JimnahEdit

Jimnah or Jimna was a son of Asher according to Genesis 46:17 and Numbers 26:44. He was one of the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

JishuiEdit

Jishui was the second son of King Saul, mentioned in Saul's genealogy in Template:Bibleverse. He is called Abinadab in 1 Chronicles 8:33 and 9:39.

JoahazEdit

For either of the biblical kings names Jehoahaz or Joahaz, see Jehoahaz of Israel or Jehoahaz of Judah.

Joahaz, according 2 Chronicles 34:8, was the name of the father of Josiah's scribe Joah.

JoaribEdit

See Jarib

JoashEdit

This entry is about the four minor biblical characters named Joash. For the kings named Joash or Jehoash, see Jehoash of Israel and Jehoash of Judah.

Joash, an abbreviated name of Jehoash, is the name of several figures in the Hebrew Bible.

  • Joash, an Abiezrite of the Tribe of Manasseh, was the father of Gideon according to Judges 6–8.<ref>Judges 6–8.</ref> His family was poor and lived in Ophrah. After Gideon tore down the altar of Baal and cut down the grove, the men of Ophrah sought to kill Gideon. Joash stood against them, saying, "He that will plead for [Baal], let him be put to death whilst it is yet morning: if he be a god, let him plead for himself, because one hath cast down his altar."
  • A Joash is described as "the king's son" in the time of Ahab. According to Stanley Arthur Cook, it is uncertain whether he was the son of king Ahab, or whether "king's son" was a title used by high officers.<ref name="cb joash">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • Joash is described as one of the descendants of Shelah, son of Judah (son of Jacob) in a genealogy of the Tribe of Judah.<ref>1 Chronicles 4:22.</ref>
  • A Joash is named as one of the Benjamite warriors to came to the aid of David when he went to Ziklag.<ref>1 Chronicles 12:3.</ref>

JobEdit

Job or Jashub was a son of Issachar according to Genesis 46:13, Numbers 26:24 and 1 Chronicles 7:1. He was one of the 70 souls to migrate to Egypt with Jacob.

JobabEdit

Jobab is the name of at least five men in the Hebrew Bible.

JoedEdit

Joed is the name of a man mentioned in passing as being an ancestor of Sallu, a Benjamite in the time of Nehemiah.<ref>Nehemiah 11:7.</ref>

JoelEdit

Joel is the name of several men in the Hebrew Bible:

  • A Hebrew Bible book of the prophet Joel, the main theme of which is the coming “Day of the Lord”. The prophet Joel cannot be identified with any of the 12 other figures in the Hebrew Bible who have the same name. He is not mentioned outside the books of Joel and Acts (Ac 2:16). His father, Pethuel (1:1), is also unknown. Judging from his concern with Judah and Jerusalem (see 2:32; 3:1,6,8,16-20), it seems likely that Joel lived in that area.
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JoelahEdit

Joelah, in 1 Chronicles 12:7, is listed as one of the Benjamite warriors who went to David at Ziklag.

JoezerEdit

Joezer, according to 1 Chronicles 12:6, is the name of one of the Benjamite warriors who came to the aid of David when he went to Ziklag in Philistine territory due to the hostility of king Saul.

JogliEdit

Jogli was the father of Bukki, a prince of the Tribe of Dan. (Num. 34:22)

JohananEdit

Johanan (Hebrew: יוחנן "God is merciful") was the name of 6 minor biblical figures in the Hebrew Bible:

JoiaribEdit

Template:See also

Joiarib ("God will contend") is the name of two biblical persons:

JokimEdit

Jokim is listed as one of the descendants of Shelah, son of Judah (son of Jacob) in 1 Chronicles 4:22.

JonathanEdit

Jonathan son of KareahEdit

Jonathan (Hebrew: יונתן "God gave") son of Kareah was among the officers who survived the destruction of Jerusalem and exile of Judeans by the king of Babylon; he was brother to Johanan q.v. – Jeremiah 40:8

JosedechEdit

See Jehozadok

JosephEdit

Joseph, father of IgalEdit

Joseph of the house of Issachar was the father of Igal, a scout sent to Canaan prior to the crossing of the Jordan River according to Numbers 13:7.

JoshahEdit

Joshah son of Amaziah is mentioned only once in the Bible, where is listed among Benjamite leaders in 1 Chronicles 4:34.<ref name="cb joshah">Template:Cite book</ref> He is one of several clan leaders who, according to Chronicles, were involved in exterminating the descendants of Ham and the Meunim, and taking their pasture-lands.

JoshaviahEdit

Joshaviah son of Elnaam is a biblical figure who appears only in 1 Chronicles 11:46, in a listing of David's Mighty Warriors.<ref name="cb joshaviah">Template:Cite book</ref>

JoshbekashahEdit

Joshbekashah appears as one of the sons of Heman in a passage which describes the musicians of the Jerusalem Temple in the time of David.<ref>1 Chronicles 25:4, 24.</ref>

JoshibiahEdit

Joshibiah (King James Version spelling Josibiah) is given in 1 Chronicles 4:35 as the father of Jehu, one of the Benjamite clan leaders in the time of Hezekiah who exterminated the descendants of Ham and the Meunim and took their farmland.<ref name="cb joshibiah">Template:Cite book</ref>

JoshuaEdit

Joshua the BethshemiteEdit

Joshua the Bethshemite was the owner of the field in which the Ark of the Covenant came to rest when the Philistines sent it away on a driverless ox-drawn cart. (1 Samuel 6:14)

Joshua the governor of the cityEdit

Joshua (Hebrew: יהושע yehoshua "God saves") was a city governor in the time of King Josiah of Judah. 2 Kings 23:8

JosibiahEdit

See Joshibiah.

JosiphiahEdit

Josiphiah is a name which appears in a list of returnees from the Babylonian captivity, where "Shelomith son of Josiphiah" is listed as the leader of the 160 men of the "descendants of Bani" who returned to Yehud Medinata in the time of Nehemiah.<ref>Ezra 8:10.</ref>

JozabadEdit

Jozabad is the name of several individuals mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. For three other individuals with a similar name, see Jehozabad.

  • Jozabad of Gederah is listed as one of David's warriors in 1 Chronicles 12:4.
  • Two men named Jozabad from the Tribe of Manasseh are listed as warriors of David in 1 Chronicles 12:20.
  • Jozabad, according to 2 Chronicle 31:13, was an overseer in the Temple at Jerusalem in the time of Hezekiah.
  • A Jozabad is described as a Levite leader in 2 Chronicles 35:9. This may be the same individual overseeing the Temple in the time of Hezekiah.<ref name="cb jozabad">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • Jozabad son of Joshua is listed as a Levite in the time of Ezra in the time of Ezra 8:33.
  • A Levite Jozabad is listed in Ezra 10:22 as having taken a foreign wife.
  • A Levite Jozabad is listed as having a foreign wife in Ezra 10:23. This man may be the same as Joshua son of Joshua mentioned above, and/or the same as the two individuals below.<ref name="cb jozabad" />
  • A Jozabad is listed in Nehemiah 8:7 as one of those who helped explain the law to the people of Yehud Medinata.
  • A Jozabad is listed as one of the inhabitants of Jerusalem in Nehemiah 11:16.

JozacharEdit

Jozachar (Hebrew: יוֹזָכָר, yozakhar, "God Remembered") or Jozacar, son of Shimeath, was one of the assassins of king Joash of Judah. In 2 Kings 12:21 the Hebrew is יוזבד, yozabad.

Jushab-hesedEdit

Jushab-hesed is a name which appears in the Hebrew Bible only in 1 Chronicles 3:20, where he is said to be one of the sons of Zerubbabel.<ref name="cb jushab-hesed">Template:Cite book</ref>

KEdit

Template:Compact TOC

KallaiEdit

Kallai is named as ancestral head of the priestly house of Sallai in the time of Jehoiakim, according to Nehemiah 12:20.

KarshenaEdit

See Carshena.

KedarEdit

Kedar (Qedar): see Qedarites: Biblical

KelalEdit

Kelal or Chelal is a person listed in Ezra as among those who married foreign women.<ref name="Ezra 10:30">Ezra 10:30.</ref>

KelitaEdit

Kelita ("maiming"<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>) was a Levite who assisted Ezra in expounding the law to the people. (Template:Bibleverse-lb,Template:Bibleverse-nb) He was also known as Kelaiah. (Template:Bibleverse-lb)

KesedEdit

Kesed was the fourth son of Nahor and Milcah mentioned in Template:Bibleverse. The KJV calls him Chesed instead of Kesed.

KemuelEdit

Kemuel was the name of 2 biblical individuals.

Keren-happuchEdit

Keren-happuch, sometimes spelled Kerenhappuch,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> is the name of Job's third daughter (Template:Bibleverse-lb) who was born after prosperity had returned to him.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

KeziahEdit

Keziah ("Cassia") is the name of Job's second daughter.<ref>Template:Bibleverse-lb</ref>

KimhamEdit

See Chimham

KolaiahEdit

Kolaiah ("voice of Jehovah") is the father of the false prophet Ahab (Template:Bibleverse-lb). It is also the name of an ancestor of Sallu that settled in Jerusalem after returning from the Babylonian exile (Template:Bibleverse-lb).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

KoreEdit

Kore was responsible for distributing the freewill offerings of the Temple in the time of King Hezekiah (Template:Bibleverse).

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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