Abihail
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [1]
Abihail (‘father is might’). 1 . As the name of a man it occurs ( a ) in 1 Chronicles 5:14 as that of a Gadite who dwelt in the land of Bashan. ( b ) It was also the name of Esther’s father, the uncle of Mordecai ( Esther 2:15; Esther 9:29 ).
2 . As the name of a woman it occurs three times: ( a ) 1 Chronicles 2:29 , the wife of Abishur, of the tribe of Judah; this is its only occurrence in pre-exilic writings. ( b ) Numbers 3:35 , a daughter of the sons of Merari, of the tribe of Levi, the mother of Zuriel, a ‘prince’ among the families of Merari. ( c ) 2 Chronicles 11:18 , the mother of Rehoboam’s wife, Mahalath, and daughter of Eliab, David’s eldest brother.
It is a woman’s name in Minæan (South Arabian) inscriptions, where it occurs in the form Ili-hail .
W. O. E. Oesterley.
Fausset's Bible Dictionary [2]
("father of splendor".)
1. Wife of Rehoboam, king of Judah, daughter, i.e. descendant of Eliab, David's oldest brother. But Keil argues that 2 Chronicles 11:19-20 shows that in 2 Chronicles 11:18 only one wife is named; therefore the sense is "Mahalath the daughter of Jerimoth Son Of David and of Abihail" (the daughter of Eliab, etc.)
2. Numbers 3:35.
3. 1 Chronicles 2:23.
4. 1 Chronicles 5:14.
5. Father of Queen Esther, and uncle of Mordecai ( Esther 2:15).
Smith's Bible Dictionary [3]
Abiha'il. (Father Of, that is, Possessing, Strength).
1. Father of Zuriel, chief of the Levitical father of Merari, a contemporary of Moses. Numbers 3:35. (B.C. 1490).
2. Wife of Abishur. 1 Chronicles 2:29.
3. Son of Huri, of the tribe of Gad. 1 Chronicles 5:14.
4. Wife of Rehoboam. She is called the daughter, that is, descendant, of Eliab, the elder brother of David. 2 Chronicles 11:18. (B.C. 972).
5. Father of Esther and uncle of Mordecai. Esther 2:15; Esther 9:29.
Holman Bible Dictionary [4]
1 Chronicles 2:29 2 2 Chronicles 11:18 Numbers 3:35 4 Esther 2:15 5 1 Chronicles 5:14
Easton's Bible Dictionary [5]
- Numbers 3:35 .
- 1Chronicles 2:29.
- 1Chronicles 5:14.
- The second wife of King Rehoboam (2Chronicles 11:18), a descendant of Eliab, David's eldest brother.
- The father of Esther and uncle of Mordecai ( Esther 2:15 ).
American Tract Society Bible Dictionary [6]
The wife of Rehoboam, king of Judah, 2 Chronicles 11.18; the "daughter" - that is here, the descendant-of Eliab, David's brother.
Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [7]
(Heb. Abicha'yil, אֲבַיחִיַל , Father Of [i.e. Endowed With ] might, or perhaps leader of the song), the name of three men and two women.
1. (Sept. ‘Αβιχαϊ v Λ . ) The father of Zuriel, which latter was the chief of the Levitical family of Merari at the exode ( Numbers 3:35). B.C. ante 1657.
2. (Sept. ‘Αβιγαία v. r . ‘Αβιχαία .) The wife of Abishur (of the family of Jerahmeel), and mother of Ahban and Molid ( 1 Chronicles 2:29, where the name in some MSS. is Abiha'Yil, אֲבַיהִיַל , apparently by error). B.C. considerably post 1612.
3. (Sept. ‘Αβιχαία .) The son of Huri, and one of the family chiefs of the tribe of Gad, who settled in Bashan ( 1 Chronicles 5:14), B.C. between 1093 and 782.
4. (Sept. ‘Αβιαϊάλ v. r. ‘Αβιαϊ v Α and ‘Αβιχαία .) The second wife of king Rehoboam, to whom she or the previous wife bore several sons ( 2 Chronicles 11:18). B.C. 972. She is there called the "daughter" of Eliab, the son of Jesse, which must mean descendant [ (See Father) ], since David, the youngest of his father's sons, was thirty years old when he began to reign, eighty years before her marriage.
5. (Sept. ‘Αμιναδάβ v. r. ‘Αβιχαϊ v Α .) The father of Esther, and uncle of Mordecai ( Esther 2:15; Esther 9:29;' comp. 2:7). B.C. ante 479.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [8]
ab´i - hāl ( אביחיל , 'ăbhı̄ḥayil ; in some manuscripts 'abhihayil , when feminine, but best reading is the former: "father, or cause, of strength"): Five persons in the Old Testament are called by this name: (1) A L evite and the father of Zuriel, who in the Wilderness was head of the house of Merari, Levi's youngest son ( Numbers 3:35 ); (2) The wife of Abishur, a man of the tribe of Judah, in the line of Hazron and Jerahmeel ( 1 Chronicles 2:29 ); (3) One of the heads of the tribe of Gad, who dwelt in Gilead of Bashan ( 1 Chronicles 5:14 ); (4) Either a wife of Rehoboam, king of Judah, or mother of his wife Mahalath, according to the interpretation of the text ( 2 Chronicles 11:18 ); probably the latter view is correct, since there is no conjunction in the text, and since ( 2 Chronicles 11:19 ) contemplates only one wife as already mentioned. This being true, she was the wife of Jerimath, a son of David, and daughter of Eliab, David's eldest brother. It is interesting to note this frequent intermarriage in the Davidic house; (5) Father of Queen Esther, who became wife of Xerxes (Biblical Ahasuerus ) king of Persia, after the removal of the former queen, Vashti, ( Esther 2:15; Esther 9:29 ). He was uncle of Mordecai.
Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature [9]
Abihail, 1
Abiha´il (Father of light or splendor), the wife of Rehoboam, king of Judah. She is called the daughter of Eliab, David's elder brother ( 2 Chronicles 11:18); but was doubtless only his descendant.
Abihail, 2
Abihail (Father of might, i.e. mighty). This name should be written Abichail. It was borne by several persons:
Abichail, the son of Huri, one of the family-chiefs of the tribe of Gad, who settled in Bashan ( 1 Chronicles 5:14).
Abichail, the father of Zuriel, who was the father of the Levitical tribes of Merari ( Numbers 3:35).
Abichail, the father of Queen Esther, and brother of Mordecai ( Esther 2:15).
References
- ↑ Abihail from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
- ↑ Abihail from Fausset's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Abihail from Smith's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Abihail from Holman Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Abihail from Easton's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Abihail from American Tract Society Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Abihail from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
- ↑ Abihail from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
- ↑ Abihail from Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature