דְּדָן
Dedan, the name of two Cushites and of their territory
Definition
Dedan is a proper name referring to both a people and a geographical region in the Old Testament. It primarily denotes a tribal group descended from Cush, the son of Ham (Genesis 10:7, 1 Chronicles 1:9), and later a group descended from Abraham through his concubine Keturah (Genesis 25:3, 1 Chronicles 1:32). The name also refers to their territory, which was likely located in the Arabian Peninsula, known for its trade in saddle-cloths (Ezekiel 27:20) and associated with other desert tribes. In prophetic literature, Dedan is often mentioned among nations facing divine judgment (Jeremiah 25:23, Ezekiel 25:13).
Biblical Usage
The name Dedan is used ten times across historical, prophetic, and poetic books. In historical genealogies (Genesis, 1 Chronicles), it identifies ancestral figures and their lineages. In the prophets, particularly Jeremiah and Ezekiel, it appears in oracles against foreign nations, often listed alongside other Arabian or Edomite tribes like Tema and Buz (Jeremiah 25:23, 49:8, Ezekiel 25:13). In Ezekiel 27, Dedan is noted as a trading partner of Tyre, supplying luxury goods. This dual usage—genealogical and geopolitical—highlights its role as both an ethnic group and a commercial entity.
Etymology
The etymology of Dedan (דְּדָן) is uncertain. It may be derived from a root meaning 'low' or related to the Hebrew word for 'breast' (דַּד, dad, H1717), though this connection is speculative. The prolonged form דְּדָנֶה (Dᵉdâneh) appears in Ezekiel 25:13. As a proper name, its origins likely lie in an ancient tribal or geographical designation from the Semitic world, possibly connected to South Arabian languages, but no definitive root has been established in biblical Hebrew.
Semantic Range
Dedan holds theological significance primarily within the themes of God's sovereignty over all nations and the fulfillment of covenant promises. Its inclusion in the Table of Nations (Genesis 10) underscores the biblical narrative of humanity's spread. The prophetic judgments against Dedan (e.g., Jeremiah 49:8, Ezekiel 25:13) demonstrate that God's justice extends beyond Israel to all peoples, affirming His lordship over history. Understanding Dedan enriches reading by highlighting how even obscure nations are part of God's overarching plan of judgment and redemption.
In its ancient Near Eastern context, Dedan was understood as a nomadic or semi-nomadic trading people inhabiting the northwestern part of the Arabian Peninsula, near the oasis of Al-`Ula. Archaeologically, the Dedanites were known as part of the early North Arabian civilizations, involved in the incense trade route. Biblically, they are culturally grouped with other desert-dwelling tribes, reflecting a society engaged in commerce and animal husbandry, distinct from the settled agricultural cultures of Israel and Judah.
Cush (Kûsh, H3568) — Ancestral forefather of one Dedanite lineage. | Sheba (Shᵉḇā’, H7614) — Another Arabian trading nation often mentioned alongside Dedan (Ezekiel 27:22-23). | Tema (Têmā’, H8485) — A neighboring Arabian tribe frequently paired with Dedan in prophetic texts (Jeremiah 25:23).
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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