Uz
Uz [1]
uz ( עוּץ , ‛ūc , עוּץ ארץ , 'erec ‛ūc ; Ὤς , Ṓs , Ὤξ , Ṓx , Αὐσῖτις , Ausı́tis ):
Biblical Data:
(1) In Genesis 10:23 Uz is the oldest son of Aram and grandson of Shem, while in 1 Chronicles 1:17 Uz is the son of Shem. Septuagint inserts a passage which supplies this lacking name. As the tables of the nations in Gen 10 are chiefly geographical and ethnographical, Uz seems to have been the name of a district or nation colonized by or descended from Semites of the Aramean tribe or family.
(2) The son of Nahor by Milcah, and older brother of Buz ( Genesis 2:21 ). Here the name is doubtless personal and refers to an individual who was head of a clan or tribe kindred to that of Abraham.
(3) A son of Dishan, son of Seir the Horite ( Genesis 36:28 ), and personal name of a Horite or perhaps of mixed Horite and Aramean blood.
(4) The native land and home of Job ( Job 1:1 ), and so situated as to be in more or less proximity to the tribe of the Temanites ( Job 2:11 ), the Shuhites ( Job 2:11 ), the Naamathites ( Job 2:11 ), the Buzites ( Job 32:2 ), and open to the inroads of the Chaldeans ( Job 1:17 ), and the Sabeans ( Job 1:15 the Revised Version (British and American)), as well as exposed to the great Arabian Desert ( Job 1:19 ). See the next article.
(5) A kingdom of some importance somewhere in Southern Syria and not far from Judea, having a number of kings ( Jeremiah 25:20 ).
(6) A kingdom, doubtless the same as that of Jeremiah 25:20 and inhabited by or in subjection to the Edomites ( Lamentations 4:21 ), and hence not far from Edom.