לוֹטָן
Lotan, an Idumaean
Definition
Lotan is a proper name referring to a significant figure in the genealogical records of the Edomites (Idumaeans). He is identified as the eldest son of Seir the Horite, a pre-Israelite inhabitant of the land of Edom (Genesis 36:20). As a clan chief, Lotan is the progenitor of the Hori and Heman clans, establishing his lineage within the tribal structure of the region (Genesis 36:22, 1 Chronicles 1:39). His inclusion in both Genesis and Chronicles underscores his role in the foundational ancestry of the Edomites, Israel's neighbors and frequent rivals.
Biblical Usage
The name Lotan appears exclusively in Old Testament genealogical lists, specifically in Genesis 36 and its parallel in 1 Chronicles 1. All five occurrences (Genesis 36:20, 22, 29; 1 Chronicles 1:38, 39) serve to document the descendants of Esau (Edom) and the Horite inhabitants of Seir. The usage is purely for historical and tribal record-keeping, establishing the pre-Israelite population and leadership structures of the land.
Etymology
The name Lotan (לוֹטָן) is derived from the Hebrew root לוּט (lûṭ, H3875), meaning 'to wrap up, cover, or veil.' It is a common Semitic pattern for forming personal names, likely conveying a sense of 'one who is covered' or 'protected.' It is linguistically related to the name of Abraham's nephew, Lot (לוֹט).
Semantic Range
While Lotan himself is not a central theological figure, his presence in the biblical record is theologically significant. His genealogy demonstrates God's sovereign oversight over all nations, not just Israel, fulfilling the promise to Abraham that many nations would descend from him (Genesis 17:4-5). The detailed account of Edomite origins, including figures like Lotan, establishes the historical reality of Israel's kinship and complex relationship with Edom, a theme developed in later prophecies (e.g., Obadiah).
As a 'chief' or 'clan leader' (אַלּוּף) of the Horites, Lotan represents the indigenous, pre-Edomite population of the hill country of Seir. Recording his name and descendants validates the legitimacy and antiquity of the Edomite tribes who later claimed that territory. In ancient Near Eastern culture, such detailed genealogies were crucial for establishing land rights, social status, and political alliances.
Seir (Śêʿîr, H8165) — The eponymous ancestor of the Horites and the name of their territory, of which Lotan was a chief. Esau (ʿĒśāw, H6215) — The father of the Edomites; Lotan's lineage is recorded as part of the pre-existing inhabitants of the land Esau's descendants would occupy.
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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