
Text -- Esther 3:1 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Est 3:1 - -- An Amalekite of the royal seed of that nation, whose kings were successively called Agag.
An Amalekite of the royal seed of that nation, whose kings were successively called Agag.

Gave him the first place and seat, which was next to the king.
JFB -> Est 3:1
JFB: Est 3:1 - -- That is, raised him to the rank of vizier, or prime confidential minister, whose pre-eminence in office and power appeared in the elevated state chair...
That is, raised him to the rank of vizier, or prime confidential minister, whose pre-eminence in office and power appeared in the elevated state chair appropriated to that supreme functionary. Such a distinction in seats was counted of vast importance in the formal court of Persia.
Clarke: Est 3:1 - -- Haman - the Agagite - Perhaps he was some descendant of that Agag, king of the Amalekites, spared by Saul, but destroyed by Samuel; and on this grou...
Haman - the Agagite - Perhaps he was some descendant of that Agag, king of the Amalekites, spared by Saul, but destroyed by Samuel; and on this ground might have an antipathy to the Jews

Clarke: Est 3:1 - -- Set his seat above all the princes - Made him his prime minister, and put all the officers of state under his direction.
Set his seat above all the princes - Made him his prime minister, and put all the officers of state under his direction.
Defender -> Est 3:1
Defender: Est 3:1 - -- It is possible that Haman was a descendant of Agag, who had been king of the Amalekites at the time of Saul (1Sa 15:8), and who had been spared by Sau...
It is possible that Haman was a descendant of Agag, who had been king of the Amalekites at the time of Saul (1Sa 15:8), and who had been spared by Saul when he destroyed the Amalekites (1Sa 15:20), then later slain by Samuel (1Sa 15:33). If so, this would help explain why Haman hated all the Jews, not Mordecai only. However, it is also known, from an Akkadian inscription, that there was a district in Media (later a part of the Medo-Persian empire) named Agag."
TSK -> Est 3:1
TSK: Est 3:1 - -- am 3551, bc 453
promote Haman : Est 7:6; Psa 12:8; Pro 29:2
Agagite : Num 24:7; 1Sa 15:8, 1Sa 15:33
above all the princes : Est 1:14; Gen 41:40, Gen 4...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Est 3:1
Barnes: Est 3:1 - -- The name, Haman, is probably the same as the Classical Omanes, and in ancient Persian, "Umana", an exact equivalent of the Greek "Eumenes."Hammedath...
The name, Haman, is probably the same as the Classical Omanes, and in ancient Persian, "Umana", an exact equivalent of the Greek "Eumenes."Hammedatha is perhaps the same as "Madata"or "Mahadata", an old Persian name signifying "given by (or to) the moon."
The Agagite - The Jews generally understand by this expression "the descendant of Agag,"the Amalekite monarch of 1 Sam. 15. Haman, however, by his own name, and the names of his sons Est 9:7-9 and his father, would seem to have been a genuine Persian.
The Classical writers make no mention of Haman’ s advancement; but their notices of the reign of Xerxes after 479 B.C. are exceedingly scanty.
Poole -> Est 3:1
Poole: Est 3:1 - -- The Agagite i. e. an Amalekite of the royal seed of that nation, whose kings were commonly and successively called Agag, as hath been observed befor...
The Agagite i. e. an Amalekite of the royal seed of that nation, whose kings were commonly and successively called Agag, as hath been observed before. It is true, he is called a Macedonian in the apocryphal additions to this book; and so he might be by his birth or habitation in that place, though by his original he was of another people.
Set his seat above all the princes that were with him gave him the first place and seat, which was next to the king. Compare 2Ki 25:28 .
Haydock -> Est 3:1
Haydock: Est 3:1 - -- Aman means, "a disturber." (Haydock) ---
Who. Septuagint add, "Bougaios, or Gogaios." Gog designates Scythia, where Aman might have been born. ...
Aman means, "a disturber." (Haydock) ---
Who. Septuagint add, "Bougaios, or Gogaios." Gog designates Scythia, where Aman might have been born. Pliny ([Natural History?] iv. 12.) places there the lake and river Ruges. But the Bugean, in Greek, may mean, "greatly puffed up:" or it may stand for Bagoas, "an eunuch," (Judith xii. 11.) like Putiphar. ---
Agag, the king of Amalec, 1 Kings xv. This title, like that of Macedonian, (chap. xvi. 10.) is probably used out of contempt, as the Jews fequently styled their enemies, "race of Chanaan," Ezechiel xvi. 3., and Daniel xiii. 56. (Calmet) ---
Sulpitius takes Aman to have been a Persian. His Amalecite ancestors may have fled before Saul into Macedonia, though he himself resided in Persia, so as to belong to all those nations. (Tirinus) (Menochius) ---
Throne. Thus were Joseph and Joakim exalted, Genesis xli. 40., and 4 Kings xxv. 28. (Calmet) ---
The Persians gave places according to merit, (Haydock) or as a reward. (Brisson.)
Gill -> Est 3:1
Gill: Est 3:1 - -- After these things,.... After the marriage of Esther, and the discovery of the conspiracy to take away the king's life, five years after, as Aben Ezra...
After these things,.... After the marriage of Esther, and the discovery of the conspiracy to take away the king's life, five years after, as Aben Ezra observe, at least more than four years, for so it appears from Est 3:7
did King Ahasuerus promote Haman the son of Hammedatha the Agagite; whom both the Targums make to descend from Amalek, and to be of the stock or family of Agag, the common name of the kings of Amalek; and so Josephus g; but this is not clear and certain; in the apocryphal Esther he is said to be a Macedonian; and Sulpitius the historian says h he was a Persian, which is not improbable; and Agag might be the name of a family or city in Persia, of which he was; and Aben Ezra observes, that some say he is the same with Memucan, see Est 1:14,
and advanced him, and set his seat above all the princes that were with him; erected a throne for him, higher than the rest, either of his own princes and nobles, or such as were his captives, see 2Ki 25:28. It was the custom of the kings of Persia, which it is probable was derived from Cyrus, to advance those to the highest seats they thought best deserved it: says he to his nobles, let there be seats with you as with me, and let the best be honoured before others;--and again, let all the best of those present be honoured with seats above others i.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Est 3:1-15
TSK Synopsis: Est 3:1-15 - --1 Haman, advanced by the king, and despised by Mordecai, seeks revenge upon all the Jews.7 He casts lots.8 He obtains by calumniation a decree of the ...
Maclaren -> Est 3:1-11
Maclaren: Est 3:1-11 - --The Net Spread
After these things did king Ahasuerus promote Haman the son of Hammedathna the Agagite, and advanced him, and set his seat above all t...
MHCC -> Est 3:1-6
MHCC: Est 3:1-6 - --Mordecai refused to reverence Haman. The religion of a Jew forbade him to give honours to any mortal man which savoured of idolatry, especially to so ...
Matthew Henry -> Est 3:1-6
Matthew Henry: Est 3:1-6 - -- Here we have, I. Haman advanced by the prince, and adored thereupon by the people. Ahasuerus had lately laid Esther in his bosom, but she had no suc...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Est 3:1-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Est 3:1-6 - --
The elevation of Haman above all the princes of the kingdom issaid in a general manner to have taken place "after these things,"i.e., afterthe matte...
Constable -> Est 2:21--3:7; Est 3:1-6
Constable: Est 2:21--3:7 - --A. Background Considerations 2:21-3:6
At this point in the narrative the writer introduced us to the vil...
