Κανδάκη
Candace
Definition
Κανδάκη (Candace) is a proper name used as a dynastic title for the queens of the ancient kingdom of Kush (Nubia/Ethiopia), similar to 'Pharaoh' for Egyptian rulers. In the New Testament, it refers specifically to the ruling queen of Ethiopia whose high-ranking treasurer, a eunuch, is encountered by Philip the evangelist in Acts 8:27. The term does not denote a personal name but an official royal title held by a series of queens. This single biblical occurrence provides the sole scriptural reference to this title and figure.
Biblical Usage
This word is used only once in the New Testament, in Acts 8:27, to identify the sovereign of the Ethiopian eunuch. It functions purely as a proper noun/title to establish the high status and geographical origin of the eunuch who was reading the prophet Isaiah and whom Philip baptized. The usage provides a specific historical and cultural anchor for the narrative of the gospel spreading beyond Judea and Samaria.
Etymology
The Greek Κανδάκη (kandakē) is a transliteration of a Meroitic (ancient Nubian) royal title, *kandake* or *kentake*, meaning 'queen mother' or 'royal woman'. It entered Greek through contact with the Kingdom of Kush. It is not derived from a Greek root but is a loanword adopted to refer specifically to these Ethiopian rulers.
Semantic Range
The mention of Candace's official in Acts 8:27 is theologically significant as it marks the explicit, divinely-directed expansion of the gospel to a Gentile from Africa (Ethiopia), fulfilling the prophecy that God's salvation would reach 'the ends of the earth' (Acts 1:8). It underscores the universal scope of the Christian message, breaking ethnic and geographical barriers. Understanding that 'Candace' was a title highlights that a powerful, distant kingdom was being reached by the gospel through a seeking individual.
In the 1st-century Greco-Roman world, 'Candace' was understood not as a personal name but as the title for the queen mothers who often wielded significant power in the Kingdom of Kush (Meroë), located in modern-day Sudan. Classical writers like Strabo and Pliny the Elder reference these ruling queens. The Ethiopian eunuch's role as a treasurer indicates he served in a sophisticated royal court, challenging modern assumptions about ancient African civilizations.
βασίλισσα (basilissa, G938) — The general Greek word for 'queen'; Κανδάκη is a specific foreign title.
Word Details
How this works
Definitions are from the Dodson Greek-English Lexicon, a concise public-domain resource suitable for introductory word study. Brief glosses are supplemented by STEPBible TBESG data (CC BY 4.0). For advanced research, standard scholarly references include BDAG (Danker, 3rd ed.) and LSJ.
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