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IDUMAEA ('ISovµai'a)

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Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 291 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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IDUMAEA ('ISovµai'a)  , the Greek
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equivalent of
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Edom (ors), a territory which, in the
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works of the Biblical writers, is considered to lie S.E. of the Dead Sea, between the
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land of
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Moab and the Gulf of Akaba . Its name, which is connected with the root meaning " red," is probably applied in reference to the red
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sandstone ranges of the mountains of
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Petra.' This etymology, however, is not certain . The apparently theophorous name Obed-Edom (2 Sam. vi. zo) shows that Edom is the name of a divinity . Of this there is other evidence; a
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Leiden
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papyrus names Etum as the wife of the Semitic fire-
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god Reshpu . The early
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history of Edom is hidden in darkness . The
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Egyptian references to it are few, and do not give us much
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light regarding its early inhabitants . In the early records of the
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Pentateuch, the country is often referred to by the name of Seir, the general name for the whole range of mountains on the east side of the Jordan-Araba depression south of the Dead Sea . These mountains were occupied, so early as we can find any record, by a cave-dwelling aboriginal
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race known as Horites, who were smitten by the much-discussed king Chedorlaomer (Gen. xiv . 6) and according to Dent. ii . 22 were driven out by the Semitic tribes of
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Esau's descendants . The Horites are to us little more than a name, though the
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discovery of cave-dwellers of very early date at
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Gezer in the excavations of 1902–1905 has enabled us to form some idea as to their probable culture-status and
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physical character . The occupants of Edom during practically the whole period of biblical history were the Bedouin tribes which claimed A curious etymological
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speculation connects the name with the story of Esau's begging for Jacob's pottage, Can.
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xxv .

30.descent through Esau from

Abraham, and were acknowledged by the Israelites (Dent.
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xxiii . 7) as kin . That they intermarried with the earlier stock is suggested by the passage in Gen.
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xxxvi . 2, naming, as one of the wives of Esau, Oholibamah, daughter of Zibeon the Horite (corrected by verse 20) . Among the peculiarities of the Edomites was government by certain officials known as D.1 *2 which the
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English versions (by too close a reminiscence of the Vulgate
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dunes) translate " dukes." The now naturalized word " sheikhs " would be the exact rendering . In addition to this Bedouin organization there was the curious institution of an elective monarchy, some of whose kings are catalogued in Gen. xxxvi . 31-39 and z Chron. i . 43-54 . These kings reigned at some date anterior,to the time of Saul . No deductions as to their chronology can be based on the silence regarding them in Moses'
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song, Exodus xv . 15 . There was a king in Edom (Num. xx .

14) who refused passage to the Israelites in their wanderings . The history of the relations of the Edomites and Israelites may be briefly summarized . Saul, whose

chief herdsman, Doeg, was an Edomite (r Sam. xxi . 7), fought successfully against them (i Sam. xiv . 47) . Joab (i Kings xi . 16) or Abishai, as his deputy (1 Chron. xviii . 11, 13), occupied Edom for six months and devastated it; it was garrisoned and permanently held by David (2 Sam. viii . 14) . But a refugee named
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Hadad, who escaped as a child to
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Egypt and grew up at the court of the Egyptian king, returned in Solomon's reign and made a series of reprisal raids on the Israelite territory (1 Kings xi . 14) . This did not prevent Solomon introducing Edomites into his
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harem (z Kings xi .

I) and maintaining a

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navy at Ezion-
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geber, at the head of the Gulf of Akaba (1 Kings ix . 26) . Indeed, until the time of Jehoram, when the land revolted (2 Kings viii . 20, 22), Edom was a dependency of
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Judah, ruled by a viceroy (r Kings xxii . 47) . An attempt at recovering their independence was temporarily quelled in a
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campaign by Amaziah (2 Kings xiv . 7), and
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Azariah his successor was able to renew the sea trade of the Gulf of Akaba (2 Kings xiv . 22) which had probably languished since the
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wreck of Jehoshaphat's
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ships (1 Kings xxii, 48); but the ancient
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kingdom had been re-established by the time of Ahaz, and the king's name, Kaush-Malak, is recorded by Tiglath Pileser . He made raids on the territory of Judah (2 Chron.
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xxviii . 17) . The kingdom, however, was short-lived, and it was soon absorbed into the vassalage of
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Assyria . The later history of Edom is curious .

By the

constant west-ward pressure of the eastern
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Arabs, which (after the restraining force of the
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great Mesopotamian kingdoms was weakened) assumed irresistible strength, the ancient Edomites were forced across the Jordan-Araba depression, and with their name migrated to the south of western
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Palestine . In r Maccabees v . 65 we find them at Hebron, and this is one of the first indications that we discover of the cis-Jordanic Idumaea of Josephus and the
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Talmud . Josephus used the name Idumaea as including not only Gobalitis, the
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original Mount Seir, but also Amalekitis, the land of Amalek, west of this, and Akrabatine, the ancient Acrabbim, S.W. of the Dead Sea . In War IV. viii . 1, he mentions two villages " in the very midst of Idumaea," named Betaris and Caphartobas . The first of these is the
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modern Beit Jibrin (see ELEUTIIEROPOLIS), the second is Tuffuh, near Hebron . Jerome describes Idumaea as extending from Beit Jibrin to Petra, and ascribes the great caves at the former place to cave-dwellers like the aboriginal Horites . Ptolemy's account presents us with the last stage, in which the name Idurnaea is entirely restricted to the cis-Jordanic
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district, and the old trans-Jordanic region is absorbed in
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Arabia . The Idumaean Antipater was appointed by
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Julius Caesar procurator of
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Judaea,
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Samaria and Galilee, as a
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reward for services rendered against
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Pompey . He was the
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father of Herod the Great, whose
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family thus was Idumaean in origin . (See PALESTINE.) (R .

A . S . M.) 2 The same word is used in the

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anonymous prophecy incorporated in the
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book of Zachariah (xii . 5), and in one or two other places as well, of
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Hebrew leaders .

End of Article: IDUMAEA ('ISovµai'a)
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