אֵיל פָּארָן
El-Paran, a portion of the district of Paran
Definition
El-Paran is a proper noun referring to a specific location in the biblical wilderness region of Paran. It is mentioned only once in the Old Testament as the southernmost point reached by the coalition of kings during their campaign against the Rephaim and other peoples (Genesis 14:6). The name itself means 'oak of Paran' or 'terebinth of Paran,' suggesting it was a notable landmark, likely a large tree or grove that served as a geographical marker. As part of the larger wilderness district of Paran, El-Paran represents a boundary or edge territory in the biblical narrative.
Biblical Usage
This term is used only once in the entire Old Testament, in Genesis 14:6. It appears in a historical-geographical context, listing the route of conquest taken by the eastern kings. Its usage is purely locative, identifying a specific point within the wilderness region of Paran, which is elsewhere associated with the wanderings of the Israelites (Numbers 10:12, 13:26) and the flight of Hagar (Genesis 21:21).
Etymology
The name is a compound of two Hebrew words: 'Êyl (H352), meaning 'ram,' 'strength,' 'chief,' or, as in this context, 'oak' or 'terebinth' (a large, sturdy tree), and Pâ'rân (H6290), the name of a wilderness region south of Canaan. Thus, El-Paran literally translates to 'oak of Paran.' This follows a common ancient Near Eastern pattern of naming places after prominent natural features.
Semantic Range
While the term itself is primarily geographical, its single appearance in Genesis 14:6 contributes to the historical veracity and geographical specificity of the patriarchal narratives. Its location on the edge of the wilderness may subtly foreshadow the later Israelite journeys. Understanding it as 'oak of Paran' connects it to other significant trees in Scripture (e.g., the oaks of Mamre in Genesis 13:18), which were often associated with divine encounters, covenants, or landmarks, hinting at the sacred significance of places in the biblical worldview.
In the ancient Near East, prominent trees like oaks or terebinths often served as important landmarks, meeting places, and sometimes even cultic sites. Naming a location after a tree was a practical way to identify it in a landscape with few permanent structures. The wilderness of Paran was a known, arid region, so a notable tree would be a significant and rare feature, making 'El-Paran' a logical and memorable place-name for its original audience.
Pâ'rân (H6290) — Refers to the broader wilderness region, not the specific landmark of the oak. Midbâr (H4057) — The general Hebrew word for 'wilderness' or 'desert,' describing the type of terrain, not a specific named location.
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 →