עַרְקִי
an Arkite or inhabitant of Erek
Definition
The Hebrew word עַרְקִי (ʻArqîy) is a gentilic noun meaning 'an Arkite,' referring to a member of a Canaanite people group descended from the Canaanite patriarch Canaan (Genesis 10:15-17). The Arkites are specifically listed among the descendants of Canaan in the Table of Nations in Genesis 10:17 and the parallel genealogy in 1 Chronicles 1:15. The term denotes an inhabitant of the city or territory of Arka (also called Erek), a location in the land of Canaan. There are no distinct biblical senses; it consistently identifies this specific ethnic group.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only twice in the Old Testament, both times in genealogical lists. It appears in the foundational Table of Nations in Genesis 10:17, cataloging the peoples descended from Canaan. The same listing is repeated in the post-exilic chronicle of 1 Chronicles 1:15. Its usage is purely ethnogeographic, serving to identify one of the pre-Israelite groups inhabiting the land promised to Abraham's descendants.
Etymology
The word is a patrial noun (a name for an inhabitant) derived from an unused place name, עַרְק (ʻArq), likely meaning 'a tusk' or 'a gnawing,' possibly referring to a geographical feature. It is formed with the gentilic suffix -ִי (-î), meaning 'belonging to' or 'from.' The place is identified with the Phoenician city of Arka, located in modern-day northern Lebanon.
Semantic Range
As a specific ethnic gentilic, עַרְקִי has minimal direct theological weight. Its significance lies in its context within the Table of Nations (Genesis 10), a text that outlines God's sovereign ordering of the peoples of the earth after the flood. The Arkites are part of the Canaanite lineage, which later becomes significant in the narrative of Israel's conquest and settlement of the Promised Land, highlighting the fulfillment of prophecy regarding the dispossession of these nations.
In its original context, the term identified a real people group known to the ancient Israelites and their neighbors. The Arkites were part of the complex tapestry of Canaanite city-states and tribes inhabiting the Levant before and during the Israelite monarchy. Understanding this word grounds the biblical genealogies in real historical and ethnic realities, contrasting ancient tribal identities with modern national concepts.
כְּנַעֲנִי (Kᵉnaʻănîy, H3669) — A broader term for all Canaanite peoples, of which the Arkites were one specific subgroup.
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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