Online Encyclopedia

NETHINIM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 421 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

NETHINIM  , the name given to the

Temple assistants in ancient Jerusalem . They are mentioned at the return from the Exile and particularly enumerated in Ezra ii. and Neh. vii . The
See also:
original form of the name was Nethunim, as in the Khetib (consonantal
See also:
reading) of Ezra viii . 17 (cf . Numbers iii . 9), and means " given " or " dedicated," i.e. to the temple . The
See also:
Talmud has also the singular form—Nathin . In all, 612 Nethinim came back from the Exile and were lodged near the " House of the Nethinim " at Ophel, towards the east wall of Jerusalem so as to, be near the Temple, where they served under the
See also:
Levites and were
See also:
free of all tolls, from which they must have been supported . It is mentioned that they had been ordered by David and the princes to serve the Levites (Ezra viii . 20) . Notwithstanding their sacred service, the Nethinim were regarded by later Jewish tradition as especially degraded, being placed in tables of precedence below bastards (Talm . Jer .

Hor. iii . 5, Jeb. vii . 5) and in the Mishna (Jeb. viii . 3) it is stated that the prohibition against intermarriage with the Moabites,
See also:
Ammonites, Egyptians and Edomites, though given in the Bible, only applied for a certain number of generations and did not apply at all to their daughters, but, it is added, " Bastards and
See also:
Net hinim are prohibited (to marry Israelites), and this prohibition is perpetual and applies both to
See also:
males and
See also:
females." To explain this combination of sacred service and exceptional degradation, it has been suggested by Joseph Jacobs that the Nethinim were the descendants of the Kedishoth, i.e.
See also:
women dedicated to the worship of
See also:
Astarte and attached to the Temple before the Exile . There is evidence of these practices from the time of Solomon (1 Kings'xi . 5) down to Josiah (2 Kings xiii . 4-6), and even as
See also:
late as Ezekiel (Ezek.
See also:
xxiii . 36-48), giving rise to the command of
See also:
Deuteronomy xxiii . 17 . An examination of the name lists given in duplicate in Ezra H . 43-58, Neh. vii . 46-59, together with the additional names in the Greek Esdras (v .

29-35), shows that the Nethinim were in

charge of the rings and hooks connected with the temple service; they sheared the sheep offered for sacrifice in the temple and poured the libations . Some of them were derived from the
See also:
wars with the Meunim; others from the
See also:
campaign with Rezin of
See also:
Damascus . One of the names given in 1 Esdras v . 34,
See also:
viol Eov/3iz, ed . Fritzsche, lov(3as, ed . Swete, would seem to throw
See also:
light on the puzzling reading o'H»o (A.V . " Sabeans," R.V . " Drunkards ") of Ezek. xxiii . 42, and if so would directly connect the list of the Nethinim with the degraded worship of Astarte in the Temple . A large majority of the names of the parents mentioned seem to be feminine in form or meaning, and suggest that the Nethinim could not trace back to any definite paternity; and this is
See also:
con-firmed by the fact that the lists are followed by the enumerationof those who could not " show their
See also:
father's house " (Ezra ii . 6o; Neh. vii . 62) .

The Greek versions, as well as

Josephus, refer to them as iepb3ovXot, which can mean one thing only . The Talmudic authorities have an abstract
See also:
term, Nethinuth, indicating the status of a Nathin (Tos . Kidd, v . 1) ed . Zucker mandel, p . 341), and corresponding to the abstract Mamziruth, " bastardy." The existence of this degraded class up to the Exile throws considerable light upon the phraseology of the prophets in referring to
See also:
idolatry as adultery and the scenes connected with it as prostitution . Their continued existence as a
See also:
pariah class after the Exile would be a perpetual reminder of the dangers and degradation of the most popular Syrian creed . These unfortunate creatures had no alternative but to accept the provisions made for them out of the Temple
See also:
treasury, but after the fall of the 'Temple they would naturally disappear by intermarriage with similar degraded classes (Mishna Kidd. viii . 3) . In the Code of Khammurabi §§ 191, 192, they could be adopted by outsiders . The above explanation of the
See also:
special degradation of the Nethinim, though they were connected with the Temple service, seems to be the only way of explaining the Talmudic reference to their tabooed position, and is an interesting example of the light that can be reflected on Biblical research by the Talmud . See Joseph Jacobs, Studies in Biblical Archaeology (1894), io4-122 ; W .

Baudissin, Geschichte

See also:
des Alttestamentlichen Priestert hums, 142 seq . This view, however, is not accepted by Cheyne,
See also:
Encyclopaedia Biblica, s.v . (J .

End of Article: NETHINIM
[back]
OLGA NETHERSOLE (1863- )
[next]
NETLEY

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.