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Well of Esek
One of the wells dug by Isaac’s servants, named 'Contention' (Esek) because the local herdsmen of Gerar quarreled over its water, illustrating the tension between the promise and environmental reality.
Ancient Water Jurisprudence
The series of disputes over wells in Genesis 26 provides a proto-legal look at territorial rights and survival in an arid economy. This entry analyzes the development of pastoral law, collective property vs. individual labour, and the methods used by ancient nomads to establish land ownership.
Ahuzzath
An official and 'friend' of King Abimelech who accompanied the king and Phichol to negotiate a covenant of peace with Isaac at Beersheba.
Ahuzzath
Ahuzzath appears as the first explicitly named personal advisor or 'friend' to a monarch in the biblical text, accompanying King Abimelech to negotiate a treaty with Isaac. His presence signifies the early development of formal royal courts and diplomatic protocols in the ancient Near East.
Basemath
A daughter of Elon the Hittite who, along with Judith, became a source of 'bitterness of spirit' to Esau's parents, illustrating the cultural and spiritual divide between the promise and Canaan.
Basemath (Daughter of Elon)
Basemath, the daughter of Elon, is one of the two Hittite women Esau took as wives at the age of forty. Her entry into the household introduced spiritual and social friction that characterized the divide between the promised line and the surrounding Canaanite cultures.
Beeri the Hittite
Beeri is a Hittite father figure whose daughters married into the family of Abraham, representing the early local Canaanite inhabitants who influenced the lives of the patriarchs through marriage and daily interaction.
Beeri the Hittite
The father of Judith and a resident of the land of Canaan whose lineage intersected with the house of Isaac through Esau's marriage.
Elon the Hittite
A Hittite whose daughter Basemath married into the family of Isaac via Esau, representing the presence of the Sons of Heth in the land.
Elon the Hittite
Elon is cited in the context of the marriage alliances between his daughters and the line of Isaac, specifically Esau. He serves as an ancestral marker for the Hittite presence in the land during the patriarchal era.