עַוִּים
Avvim (as inhabited by Avvites), a place in Palestine (with the article prefix)
Definition
The Hebrew word עַוִּים (ʻAvvîym) is a proper noun referring to a specific people group and the town they inhabited. In the Bible, it primarily denotes the 'Avvim' or 'Avvites,' an ancient Canaanite tribe that originally lived in the region southwest of Bethel. The single biblical occurrence in Joshua 18:23 lists 'Avvim' (with the definite article 'the Avvim') as one of the towns allotted to the tribe of Benjamin after the Israelite conquest. This suggests it was a known, though likely minor, settlement at that time. Earlier references (Deuteronomy 2:23) mention a separate, possibly related, people called the Avvim who lived in villages near Gaza until the Caphtorim (Philistines) displaced them, indicating the name may refer to different groups in different eras or locations.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the Old Testament, in Joshua 18:23, within a detailed list of cities given to the tribe of Benjamin. The context is purely geographical and administrative, part of the division of the Promised Land. The form used includes the definite article (הָעַוִּים, ha-ʻAvvîym), meaning 'the Avvim,' treating it as the name of a town known by the people who once lived there. No narrative or theological discourse surrounds its single use.
Etymology
The word עַוִּים (ʻAvvîym) is the masculine plural form of the noun עַוִּי (ʻavvî, H5757), which likely means 'a ruin' or 'a heap of ruins.' This root suggests the name may have originally described a destroyed or desolate place, perhaps indicating the town's condition when the Israelites encountered it or memorializing the fate of its earlier inhabitants.
Semantic Range
The Avvim are remembered as part of the ancient pre-Israelite population of Canaan. Their inclusion in a town list demonstrates how Israelite geography often preserved the names of earlier peoples, even after conquest or assimilation. This reflects the layered history of the land and the biblical record's awareness of prior inhabitants.
No direct synonyms as a proper place name. For related concepts of ancient peoples: כְּנַעֲנִי (Kĕnaʻanîy, H3669) — a broader term for Canaanite inhabitants; פְּרִזִּי (Pĕrizzîy, H6522) — another specific Canaanite tribe group often listed alongside others.
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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