Adonizedek

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Adonizedek
King of Jerusalem
Reignc. 1350 BCE

Adonizedek (Hebrew: אֲדֹנִי־צֶדֶק ʾĂḏōnī-ṣeḏeq, also transliterated Adoni-zedec) was king of Jerusalem at the time of the Israelite invasion of Canaan, according to the Book of Joshua.[1] According to Cheyne and Black, the name originally meant "Ṣedeḳ is lord", but this would likely have been read later as meaning "lord of righteousness" or "my lord is righteousness".[2][3]

Adonizedek led a coalition of five of the neighboring Amorite rulers (Hoham, king of Hebron; Piram, king of Jarmuth; Japhia, king of Lachish; and Debir, king of Eglon) in resisting the invasion, but the allies were defeated at Gibeon, and suffered at Beth-horon, not only from their pursuers, but also from a great hail storm. The five allied kings took refuge in a cave at Makkedah and were imprisoned there until after the battle, when Joshua commanded that they be brought before him; whereupon they were brought out, humiliated, and put to death.[4]

According to the Midrash, the name Adoni-zedek is translated as "Master of Zedek"—that is, "of Jerusalem", the city of righteousness.[5]

Genesis 14:18-20 records that, some 600 years prior to Adoni-zedek, there was another ruler of Jerusalem named Melchi-zedek. It may be possible that Zedek was a dynastic name/title for the rulers of Jerusalem before David.

M. G. Easton, in the 1894 Easton's Bible Dictionary, identifies Adonizedek with a king of Jerusalem called `Abdi-Heba ("servant of Heba"), who around 1350 BC wrote several letters to the Pharaoh of Egypt. Six of his letters to the king of Egypt are included in the Amarna letters,[6] and he is mentioned in a seventh.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ Joshua 10:1–3
  2. ^ W. Robertson Smith and George F. Moore (1899), "Adoni-zedec" in Cheyne and Black, eds. Encyclopaedia Biblica. [1]
  3. ^ Geoffrey W. Bromiley ed., The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1994, entries Melchizedek, Adoni-zedek
  4. ^ Joshua 10:22–19
  5. ^ Genesis Rabbah xliii. 6. For an English translation, see H. Freedman; Maurice Simon, eds. (1961) [1939]. Midrash Rabbah: Translated into English with Notes, Glossary, and Indices. Hertford, England: Stephen Austin and Sons, Ltd. p. 356.
  6. ^ EA 285-290 (Amarna letters numbered 285-290)
  7. ^ EA 280 (Amarna letter number 280)
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