Deuel

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Smith's Bible Dictionary [1]

De'uel or De-u'el. (Invocation Of God). Father of Eliasaph, the "captain" of the tribe of Gad, at the time of the numbering of the people at Sinai.  Numbers 1:14;  Numbers 7:42;  Numbers 7:47;  Numbers 10:20. (B.C. 1491). The same man is mentioned again in  Numbers 2:14 but here the name appears as Ruel .

Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [2]

Deuel . Father of Eliasaph, prince of Gad (  Numbers 1:14;   Numbers 7:42;   Numbers 7:47;   Numbers 10:20 ) = Reuel ,   Numbers 2:14 (perhaps the original name).

Fausset's Bible Dictionary [3]

 Numbers 1:14;  Numbers 7:42; in  Numbers 3:14 Reuel, the Hebrew letter Resh ( ר ) closely resembling the Hebrew letter Daleth ( ד ).

Morrish Bible Dictionary [4]

Father of Eliasaph, 'prince' of Gad.  Numbers 1:14;  Numbers 7:42,47;  Numbers 10:20 . In  Numbers 2:14 he is called REUEL.This is plainly an instance where the letter ד (D) has been mistaken for the letter ר(R).

Holman Bible Dictionary [5]

 Numbers 1:14 Numbers 2:14

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [6]

(Heb. Deuel,; דְּעוּאֵל , according to Gesenius, Invocation Of God ; according to Furst, Acquainted With God ; Sept. ῾Ραγουήλ ; Vulg. Dehuel ), father of Eliasaph, the "captain" ( נָשַׂיא ) of the tribe of Gad at the time of the numbering of the people at Sinai ( Numbers 1:14;  Numbers 7:42;  Numbers 7:47;  Numbers 10:20). B.C. ante 1657. The same man is mentioned again in 2:14, but here the name appears as REUEL (See Reuel) (q.v.), owing to an interchange of the two very similar Hebrew letters ד and ר . In this latter passage the Samaritan, Arabic, and Vulg. retain the D; the Sept., as in other places, has R. The greater weight of evidence is therefore in favor of the reading "Deuel" in both passages. Furst ingeniously suggests ( Heb. Handw . p. 304) that the name may have been originally Daruel ( דִּרְעוּאֵל ), which would explain the various reading.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [7]

dū´el , dē̇ - ū´el דּעוּאל , de‛ū'ēl , "knowledge of God"): A G adite, the father of Eliasaph, the representative of the tribe of Gad in the census-taking ( Numbers 1:14 ), in making the offering of the tribe at the dedication of the altar ( Numbers 7:42 ,  Numbers 7:47 ), and as leader of the host of the tribe of the children of Gad in the wilderness ( Numbers 10:20 ). Called Reuel in   Numbers 2:14 , daleth (ד , d ) being confused with resh (ר , r ).

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