הֹדוּ
Hodu (i.e. Hindustan)
Definition
Hodu is the biblical Hebrew name for the region known in antiquity as the easternmost province of the Persian Empire, corresponding roughly to the Indus River valley and parts of modern-day India and Pakistan. In the Bible, it consistently refers to this geographical territory, which was a distant, wealthy, and exotic land from the perspective of the Israelites. The term appears only in the book of Esther, where it is listed as part of the vast domain of King Ahasuerus (Xerxes I), stretching from Hodu (India) to Cush (Ethiopia) (Esther 1:1, 8:9). There are no differing meanings or senses; it functions solely as a proper noun for this specific location.
Biblical Usage
The word Hodu is used exclusively in the book of Esther, occurring twice. In both instances, it serves to define the eastern boundary of the Persian Empire under King Ahasuerus. The usage highlights the immense scale and diversity of the king's dominion, emphasizing his power and the far-reaching scope of the events in the story. The specific references are Esther 1:1, which introduces the empire's extent, and Esther 8:9, where the king's edict is sent to all provinces, including Hodu.
Etymology
The word Hodu is of foreign origin, borrowed into Hebrew from Old Persian. It derives from the Old Persian name 'Hiduš,' which referred to the Indus River region and the land beyond it. This term is the source for the Greek 'Indos' and the English 'India.' Its presence in Hebrew scripture reflects direct contact and knowledge of the Persian Empire's administrative geography during the post-exilic period.
Semantic Range
While Hodu itself is a geographical term, its inclusion in Esther carries theological significance. It underscores the theme of God's providence operating on a global scale, even in a book where His name is never mentioned. The mention of this distant land illustrates that God's care for His people extends throughout the entire empire of their captivity. The vastness of the empire, from Hodu to Cush, sets the stage for the dramatic, nationwide deliverance of the Jewish people, showing that no corner of the known world is beyond the reach of His sovereign plan.
For the original Israelite audience, Hodu represented the absolute eastern frontier of the civilized world as they knew it under Persian rule. It was a land synonymous with immense distance, exotic goods (like spices and textiles), and great wealth. Its mention would have immediately conveyed the idea of vast imperial power and reach. This cultural understanding differs from the modern concept of India as a specific nation-state, as the ancient term encompassed a broader and less precisely defined region.
None directly synonymous as a proper noun for India. For other distant lands in the Persian Empire: Kush (Kûš, H3568) — refers to Ethiopia/Nubia, the southern frontier.
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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