כָּפָר
a village (as protected by walls)
Definition
The Hebrew noun כָּפָר (kâphâr) refers to a small, unwalled village or settlement in the countryside, distinct from a major fortified city. It denotes a rural community, likely protected by its geographic setting or simple enclosures rather than formal defensive walls. This term appears only twice in the Old Testament: in 1 Chronicles 27:25, where it is listed among King David's royal storehouses in the 'villages,' and in Song of Solomon 7:11, where the beloved invites her lover to go out to the 'villages' of the countryside, highlighting its pastoral, rural connotation.
Biblical Usage
כָּפָר is used exclusively in poetic and administrative contexts within the Old Testament. Its two occurrences illustrate its meaning as a rural settlement. In 1 Chronicles 27:25, it appears in a list of royal administrative holdings, indicating villages as economic units for storage. In Song of Solomon 7:11, it is used in a romantic, pastoral invitation, evoking the simplicity and beauty of the countryside. There is no pattern of usage suggesting a fortified town; it consistently means an open village.
Etymology
The noun כָּפָר derives from the root verb כָּפַר (kâphar, H3722), which primarily means 'to cover' or 'to atone.' The connection likely stems from the idea of a village being a 'covering' or protected place, though the noun's specific meaning of a rural settlement is distinct from the verb's theological uses. It is a cognate with the later Hebrew כְּפָר (k'far), which also means 'village.' It is compared to, but distinct from, כְּפִיר (k'phîr, H3715), meaning 'young lion.'
Semantic Range
In ancient Israelite culture, a כָּפָר represented the common, agricultural settlements outside urban centers. Unlike a walled city (עִיר, 'îr), a village was more vulnerable but central to daily agrarian life. Understanding this distinction helps modern readers grasp the pastoral setting of Song of Solomon 7:11 and the administrative geography in 1 Chronicles 27:25, where villages were integral to the kingdom's economic infrastructure.
עִיר ('îr, H5892) — a larger, walled city or town. כְּפָר (k'far) — a later Hebrew term for village, essentially synonymous. חָצֵר (châtsêr, H2691) — a settlement or enclosure, often a hamlet or courtyard.
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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