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Genesis 10:7-10

Context
10:7 The sons of Cush were Seba, 1  Havilah, 2  Sabtah, 3  Raamah, 4  and Sabteca. 5  The sons of Raamah were Sheba 6  and Dedan. 7 

10:8 Cush was the father of 8  Nimrod; he began to be a valiant warrior on the earth. 10:9 He was a mighty hunter 9  before the Lord. 10  (That is why it is said, “Like Nimrod, a mighty hunter before the Lord.”) 10:10 The primary regions 11  of his kingdom were Babel, 12  Erech, 13  Akkad, 14  and Calneh 15  in the land of Shinar. 16 

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[10:7]  1 sn The descendants of Seba settled in Upper Egypt along the Nile.

[10:7]  2 sn The Hebrew name Havilah apparently means “stretch of sand” (see HALOT 297 s.v. חֲוִילָה). Havilah’s descendants settled in eastern Arabia.

[10:7]  3 sn The descendants of Sabtah settled near the western shore of the Persian Gulf in ancient Hadhramaut.

[10:7]  4 sn The descendants of Raamah settled in southwest Arabia.

[10:7]  5 sn The descendants of Sabteca settled in Samudake, east toward the Persian Gulf.

[10:7]  6 sn Sheba became the name of a kingdom in southwest Arabia.

[10:7]  7 sn The name Dedan is associated with àUla in northern Arabia.

[10:8]  8 tn Heb “fathered.” Embedded within Cush’s genealogy is an account of Nimrod, a mighty warrior. There have been many attempts to identify him, but none are convincing.

[10:9]  15 tn The Hebrew word for “hunt” is צַיִד (tsayid), which is used on occasion for hunting men (1 Sam 24:12; Jer 16:16; Lam 3:15).

[10:9]  16 tn Another option is to take the divine name here, לִפְנֵי יִהוָה (lifne yÿhvah, “before the Lord [YHWH]”), as a means of expressing the superlative degree. In this case one may translate “Nimrod was the greatest hunter in the world.”

[10:10]  22 tn Heb “beginning.” E. A. Speiser, Genesis (AB), 67, suggests “mainstays,” citing Jer 49:35 as another text where the Hebrew noun is so used.

[10:10]  23 tn Or “Babylon.”

[10:10]  24 sn Erech (ancient Uruk, modern Warka), one of the most ancient civilizations, was located southeast of Babylon.

[10:10]  25 sn Akkad, or ancient Agade, was associated with Sargon and located north of Babylon.

[10:10]  26 tn No such place is known in Shinar (i.e., Babylonia). Therefore some have translated the Hebrew term כַלְנֵה (khalneh) as “all of them,” referring to the three previous names (cf. NRSV).

[10:10]  27 sn Shinar is another name for Babylonia.



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