Heth

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Easton's Bible Dictionary [1]

Genesis 10:18Deuteronomy 7:1Genesis 23:3,7Genesis 23:3,5,7,10,16,18,20

Fausset's Bible Dictionary [2]

Son of Canaan, Ham's son; from whence sprung the Hittites, occupying the hill country of Judah near Hebron. But the race enlarged its borders so that they with the Amorites represent all Canaan (Joshua 1:4; Ezekiel 16:3, "thy father was an Amorite, thy mother an Hittite".) See Genesis 23:3-20. Esau's marriage to one of the daughters of Heth "grieved the mind" of Isaac and Rebekah, for their morals were lax and their worship idolatrous (Genesis 26:34-35; Genesis 27:46). In Solomon's and in Joram's times there were independent Hittite kings (1 Kings 10:29; 2 Kings 7:6). In the Egyptian monuments they are called the Kheta, who made themselves masters of Syria.

Holman Bible Dictionary [3]

Genesis 10:15Genesis 23:1

Hitchcock's Bible Names [4]

Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [5]

HETH . A ‘son’ of Canaan, Genesis 10:15 (J [Note: Jahwist.] ) = 1 Chronicles 1:13 . The wives of Esau are called in Genesis 27:46 (R [Note: Redactor.] ) ‘daughters of Heth’; and in Genesis 23:3 ff; Genesis 25:10; Genesis 49:32 (all P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] ) ‘children of Heth,’ i.e. Hittites, are located at Mamre. See, further, Hittites.

Morrish Bible Dictionary [6]

Second son of Canaan, from whom descended the HITTITES, q.v. They are often called 'the children of Heth.' Genesis 10:15; Genesis 23:3-20; Genesis 25:10; Genesis 27:46; Genesis 49:32; 1 Chronicles 1:13 .

Smith's Bible Dictionary [7]

Heth. (terror). The forefather of the nation of the Hittites. In the genealogical tables of Genesis 10:15 and 1 Chronicles 1:13, Heth is a son of Canaan. Genesis 24:3-4; Genesis 28:1-2.

Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary [8]

the father of the Hittites, was the eldest son of Canaan, Genesis 10:15 , and dwelt southward of the promised land, probably about Hebron. Ephron, who was an inhabitant of that city, was of the race of Heth; and in the time of Abraham the whole city were of the family of Heth.

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [9]

(Heb. Chetf, חֶת , dread; Sept. (ὁ Χετταῖος, and so Josephus, Ant. 1, 6, 2), a son (descendant) of Canaan, and the ancestor of the HITTITES (Genesis 5:20; Deuteronomy 7:1; Joshua 1:4), who dwelt in the vicinity of Hebron (Genesis 23:3; Genesis 23:7; Genesis 25:10). The ‘ kings of the Hittites" is spoken of all the Canaanitish kings (2 Kings 2:6). In the genealogical tables of Genesis 10 and 1 Chronicles 1, Heth is named as a son of Canaan, younger than Zidon the firstborn, but preceding the Jebusite, the Amorite, and the other Canaanitish-families. The Hittites were therefore a Hamitic race, neither of the "country" nor the "kindred" of Abraham and Isaac (Genesis 24:3-4; Genesis 28:1-2). In the earliest historical mention of the nation the beautiful narrative of Abraham's purchase of the cave of Machpelah they are styled, not Hittites, but Bene-Cheth (A.V. "sons and children of Heth," Genesis 23:3; Genesis 23:5; Genesis 23:7; Genesis 23:10; Genesis 23:16; Genesis 23:18; Genesis 23:20; Genesis 25:10; Genesis 49:32). Once we hear of the "daughters of Heth" (Genesis 27:46), the "daughters of the land," at that early period still called, after their less immediate progenitor, "daughters of Canaan" (Genesis 28:1; Genesis 28:8, compared with Genesis 27:46, and Genesis 26:34-35; see also 1 Kings 11:1; Ezekiel 16:3). In the Egyptian monuments the name Chat is said to stand for Palestine (Bunsen, Egypten, quoted by Ewald, Gesch. 1, 317, note). (See Hittite).

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