the Week of Proper 28 / Ordinary 33
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Bible Encyclopedias
Joktan
The 1901 Jewish Encyclopedia
âBiblical Data:
Younger son of Eber and progenitor of thirteen Arabic tribes (Genesis 10:25-29; 1 Chronicles 1:19-23), many of whichâas Hazarmaveth, Shebah, Ophir, and Havilahâhave been identified. The name seems to mean "the younger" or "the smaller," but in Gen. R. 37:10 it is interpreted as "he who humbles himself," and for his humility Joktan was rewarded by being made the ancestor of thirteen tribes. The place of settlement of Joktan's descendants is given as "from Mesha, as thou goest unto Sephar, a mount of the east" (Genesis 10:30). The district indicated is in Arabia, but Targum pseudo-Jonathan identifies Sephar with Sepharvaim. Josephus ("Ant." 1:6, § 4) asserts that their dwelling was "from Cophen, an Indian river, and in part of Asia adjoining it."
âIn Arabic Literature:
Joktan in Arabic literature bears the name "Ḳaḥá¹an." In Genesis 10 Joktan is described as the ancestor of several south-Arabian tribes. In accordance with this statement Arab genealogists hold Ḳaḥá¹an to be the first king of Yemen, and his son and successor Ya'rub the first person who spoke Arabic. This is but the legendary form of the tradition that Ḳaḥá¹an was the progenitor of the southern Arabs, or Arabs proper, while the Ishmaelite Arabs were originally of non-Arab stock; but, pretending to be Arabs, they adopted Arab customs and intermarried with genuine Arabs, being therefore called "Musta'rabs." Another son of Ḳaḥá¹an, who was called Jurhum, emigrated to northwest Arabia, and founded a kingdom in the Ḥijaz. This tradition was probably invented at a later date in order to establish a close relationship between the northern and southern Arabs, because it is added that Ishmael married a woman of the tribe of Jurhum and became a member thereof.
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Singer, Isidore, Ph.D, Projector and Managing Editor. Entry for 'Joktan'. 1901 The Jewish Encyclopedia. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​tje/​j/joktan.html. 1901.