Jokshan

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Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [1]

Jokshan Son of Abraham and Keturah, and father of Sheba (Saba) and DedanGenesis 25:2 ,   1 Chronicles 1:32 ). The name seems quite unknown, and the suggestion that it is identical with Joktan seems the most plausible.

Fausset's Bible Dictionary [2]

Son of Abraham and Keturah ( Genesis 25:2-3;  1 Chronicles 1:32); father of Sheba and Dedan. (See Dedan .) Jokshan is identified by some with the Cassanitae on the Red Sea (Ptol. 6:7, sec. 6).

Smith's Bible Dictionary [3]

Jok'shan. (Fowler). A son of Abraham and Keturah,  Genesis 25:2-3;  1 Chronicles 1:32, whose sons were Sheba and Dedan.

Morrish Bible Dictionary [4]

Son of Abraham and Keturah.  Genesis 25:2,3;  1 Chronicles 1:32 .

American Tract Society Bible Dictionary [5]

The second son of Abraham and Keturah, ancestor of the Sabeans and Dedanites of Southern Arabia,  Genesis 25:1-3 .

Easton's Bible Dictionary [6]

 Genesis 25:2,3 1 Chronicles 1:32

Holman Bible Dictionary [7]

 Genesis 25:2-3

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [8]

(Heb. Yokshan', יָקְשָׁן , Narer; Sept. Ι᾿Εζάν v.r. Ι᾿Εξάν or Ι᾿Εκσάν ), the second son of Abraham and Keturah, whose sons Sheba and Dedan appear to have been the ancestors of the Sabaeans and Dedanites, that peopled a part of Arabia Felix ( Genesis 25:2-3;  1 Chronicles 1:32-33). B.C. cir. 2020. "If the Keturahites stretched across the desert from the head of the Arabian to that of the Persian Gulf, (See Dedan), then we must suppose that Jokshan returned westwards to the trans-Jordanic country, where are placed the settlements of his sons, or at least the chief of their settlements, for a wide spread of these tribes seems to be indicated in the passages in the Bible which make mention of them. The writings of the Arabs are rarely of use in the case of Keturahite tribes, whom they seem to confound with Ishmaelites in one common appellation. They mention a dialect of Jokshan (Yakish, who is Yokshan, as having been formerly spoken near 'Aden and El-Jened, in Southern Arabia: Yakit's Moajam, cited in the Zeitschrift d. Deutsch. Morgenl. Gesellschaft, 8, 600-1; 10, 30-1); but that Midianites penetrated so far into the peninsula we hold to be highly improbable" (Smith). "Knobel (Genes. p. 188) suggests that the name Jokshan may have passed into Kashan ( קשׁן ), and that his descendants were the Cassanitoe ( Κασσανῖται ) of Ptolemy (6, 7, 6) arid Steph. Byzant. (s.v.), the Casandres ( Κασανδρεῖς ) of Agatharchides (p. 6, ed. Huds.), the Gasandres ( Γασανδρεῖς ) of Diod. Sic. (3, 44), and the Casani or Gasani of Pliny (Hist. Nat. 6, 32), who dwelt by the Red Sea, to the south of the Cinaedocolpites, and extended to the most northern of the Joktanites." (See Arabia).

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [9]

jok´shan ( יקשׁן , yoḳshān , meaning unknown): Son of Abraham and Keturah (  Genesis 25:2 ,  Genesis 25:3 parallel   1 Chronicles 1:32 ). Tuch suggested that yoḳshān = yoḳtān ( Genesis 10:25-29 ); see HDB , under the word; Skinner, Gen, 350.

Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature [10]

Jok´shan (fowler), second son of Abraham and Keturah, whose sons Sheba and Dedan appear to have been the ancestors of the Sabæans and Dedanites, who peopled a part of Arabia Felix [ARABIA].

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