אַלּוֹן
Allon, an Israelite, also a place in Palestine
Definition
Allon is a proper noun referring to two distinct entities in the Old Testament. First, it is the name of an Israelite, Allon, who is listed among the descendants of Simeon in 1 Chronicles 4:37. Second, it is the name of a location, Allon, mentioned in the description of the territory of Naphtali in Joshua 19:33. The context in Joshua suggests it is a specific place, likely a landmark or town, though its exact nature is not detailed. The word is identical in form to the common noun for 'oak' or 'terebinth' (H437), which may hint at the character of the place.
Biblical Usage
The word is used only twice in the Old Testament, each time as a proper name. In Joshua 19:33, it appears in a geographical list defining a border point for the tribe of Naphtali ('...from Allon to Zaanannim...'). In 1 Chronicles 4:37, it is used as a personal name in a genealogical record of the Simeonites. There are no patterns of usage beyond these two specific, non-narrative references.
Etymology
The word 'אַלּוֹן' (Allon) is grammatically the same as the common noun 'אַלּוֹן' (allon, H437), meaning 'oak' or 'terebinth tree.' As a proper noun, it is derived from this tree name, likely indicating that the person or place was associated with a notable oak tree, a common practice for naming in the ancient Near East. It shares a root with words for strength and durability, reflecting the nature of the tree.
Semantic Range
In ancient Israelite culture, significant trees like oaks or terebinths often served as landmarks, meeting places, or sites with religious associations (e.g., Genesis 12:6, 35:8). Naming a person or location 'Allon' likely connected them to such a recognizable natural feature, implying stability, prominence, or a specific communal memory tied to that place. This differs from a modern understanding where place names may be more arbitrary.
אֵלָה (ʼêlâh, H424) — a different term also often translated 'oak' or 'terebinth,' sometimes used interchangeably but may refer to a specific species. אַלּוֹן (allon, H437) — the identical common noun meaning 'oak,' from which the proper name is directly derived.
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.
Full methodology & sources →