אַחְמְתָא
Achmetha (i.e. Ecbatana), the summer capital of Persia
Definition
Achmetha is the Hebrew name for Ecbatana, the ancient summer capital of the Median and Persian empires. In the Bible, it is specifically mentioned as the location where a crucial royal decree was archived. The reference in Ezra 6:2 identifies it as the fortress in the province of Media where King Cyrus's original decree authorizing the rebuilding of the Jerusalem temple was found. This single biblical occurrence establishes Achmetha as a significant administrative center within the Persian imperial system, directly tied to the restoration of Jewish worship after the exile.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the Old Testament, in Ezra 6:2. It is used in a specific historical and administrative context, identifying the location of a royal archive. The usage is purely geographical, serving to authenticate the discovered document (Cyrus's decree) by noting its provenance from a major Persian capital city.
Etymology
The word 'אַחְמְתָא' (ʼAchmᵉthâʼ) is a direct loanword from Old Persian, likely related to 'Hagmatāna,' meaning 'place of gathering.' This etymology reflects the city's role as a political and administrative center. Its adoption into Biblical Hebrew demonstrates the linguistic and cultural contact between the Jewish people and the Persian Empire during the post-exilic period.
Semantic Range
The mention of Achmetha is theologically significant as it underscores God's sovereign use of foreign empires and their bureaucratic systems to fulfill His covenant promises. The discovery of Cyrus's decree in this distant Persian capital directly facilitated the rebuilding of the Temple in Jerusalem, a key event in Israel's restoration. It highlights God's providence in preserving His word through secular archives and moving the heart of a pagan king (Isaiah 44:28, 45:1) to accomplish His redemptive purposes.
Ecbatana (Achmetha) was renowned in the ancient world as a magnificent city and the cool summer residence of Persian kings, contrasting with the hotter capitals of Susa and Babylon. Mentioning it as the source of the decree lent immediate authority and credibility to the document, as it came from the heart of imperial record-keeping. For the original Jewish readers, this detail confirmed the decree's legitimacy and the Persian empire's official sanction for their rebuilding project.
There are no direct Hebrew synonyms for this proper place name. Other capitals mentioned in the context of the Persian Empire include: שׁוּשַׁן (Shûshan, H7800) — Susa, the primary administrative capital; and בָּבֶל (Bâbel, H894) — Babylon, a major conquered city and former imperial center.
Word Details
How this works
Hebrew definitions are from Brown-Driver-Briggs (1906) and Strong's Exhaustive Concordance (1890), both public domain. BDB was groundbreaking for its era but reflects 19th-century assumptions about Semitic etymology. Modern scholarship (HALOT, DCH) has revised many entries. Use these definitions as a starting point for exploration, not as the final word on a term's meaning in context.
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