Online Encyclopedia

ESAU

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 760 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ESAU  , the son of

Isaac and Rebecca, in the Bible, and the elder twin
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brother of Jacob . . He was so called because he was red (admoni) and hairy when he was born, and the name
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Edom (red) was given to him when he sold his birthright to Jacob for a
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meal of red
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lentil pottage (Gen.
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xxv . 21-34) . Another story of the manner in which Jacob obtained the superiority is related in Gen.
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xxvii . Here the younger brother impersonated the elder, and succeeded in deceiving his blind
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father by imitating the hairiness of his brother . He thus gained the blessing intended for the first-born, and Esau, on hearing how he had been fore-stalled, vowed to kill him . Jacob accordingly fled to his
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mother's relatives, and on his return, many years later, peace was restored between them (xxxii. sq.) . These
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primitive stories of the relations between the
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eponymous heads of the Edomites and Israelites are due to the older (Judaean)
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sources; the
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late notices of the Priestly school (see GENESIS) preserve a different account of the parting of the two (Gen.
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xxxvi . 6-8), and
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lay
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great stress upon Esau's marriages with the Canaanites of the
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land, unions which were viewed (from the writer's standpoint) with great aversion (Gen.
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xxvi . 34 sq., xxvii . 46) . For " Esau " as a designation of the Edomites, cf .

Jer. xlix . 8, Obad. an 6, 8, and on their

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history, see EDOM . Esau's characteristic hairiness (Gen. xxv . 25, xxvii . 11) has given rise to the
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suggestion that his name is properly 'eshav, from a root corresponding to the Arab . 'athiya, to have thick or matted hair . Mt Seir, too, where he resided, etymologically suggests a " shaggy " mountain-land . According to Hommel (Sud-crab . Chrestom. p . 39 sq.) the name Esau has S . Arabian analogies . On the possible identity of the name with Usoos, the Phoenician demi-
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god (Philo of Byblus, ap .

Eusebius, Praep . Evang. i. io), see Cheyne, Encyc . Bib. col . 1333; Lagrange, Etudes sur
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les religions semitiques, p . 416 (Paris, 190; Ed . Meyer, Israeliten, 278 sq . (and, on general questions, ib . 128 sq., 329 sqq.) . (S . A .

End of Article: ESAU
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