דָּן
Dan, one of the sons of Jacob; also the tribe descended from him
Definition
Dan is a proper name with three primary biblical referents. First, it refers to Dan, the fifth son of Jacob, born to Bilhah, Rachel's maidservant (Genesis 30:6). Second, it denotes the Israelite tribe descended from him, one of the twelve tribes of Israel (Exodus 1:4). Third, it identifies the territory allotted to the tribe, located in the southern coastal plain, and later, a northern city (Laish) conquered and renamed Dan, which became the northernmost point of the kingdom (Judges 18:29, 'from Dan to Beersheba').
Biblical Usage
The name Dan is used 63 times throughout the Old Testament, primarily in the Pentateuch (Genesis, Exodus, Numbers) and historical books (Joshua, Judges, 1 & 2 Chronicles). It appears in genealogical lists (Genesis 35:25, 1 Chronicles 2:2), tribal censuses (Numbers 1:39), and territorial descriptions (Joshua 19:40-48). A key pattern is its use in the phrase 'from Dan to Beersheba' to signify the entire land of Israel (e.g., Judges 20:1, 1 Samuel 3:20).
Etymology
The name Dan (דָּן) is derived from the Hebrew verb דִּין (din, H1777), meaning 'to judge' or 'to vindicate.' This origin is explicitly stated when Rachel names him at his birth: 'She named him Dan, saying, 'God has vindicated me'' (Genesis 30:6). It is a verbal noun meaning 'judge' or 'he judged.'
Semantic Range
The tribe of Dan holds significant theological and prophetic weight. Jacob's blessing in Genesis 49:16-17 portrays Dan as a judge of his people but also as a 'serpent by the roadside,' a metaphor often interpreted as cunning or later instability. The tribe's failure to fully conquer its initial allotment (Judges 1:34) and its later migration to the north, establishing an idolatrous center (Judges 18:30-31), positions it as a symbol of compromise and apostasy. Furthermore, Dan is notably omitted from the list of sealed tribes in Revelation 7:4-8, a point of much theological discussion regarding God's faithfulness and tribal identity.
In ancient Israelite culture, a name was deeply connected to identity and destiny. Naming a child 'Judge' (Dan) was a public declaration of God's justice in Rachel's life. The tribe's later history—struggling for territory, migrating, and establishing a rival worship center with a stolen idol and a non-Levitical priesthood (Judges 18)—reflects a departure from its namesake's ideal of righteous judgment, instead embodying pragmatic and syncretistic survival.
There are no direct synonyms for this proper name. Conceptually, it relates to: שָׁפַט (shaphat, H8199) — a more common verb for 'to judge,' governing or deciding; and דִּין (din, H1777) — its root, focusing on the act of contending or executing judgment.
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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