מְדִינָה
Definition
The Hebrew noun מְדִינָה (mᵉdîynâh) refers to a province, a defined administrative district within a larger empire or kingdom. In the biblical context, it specifically denotes the political subdivisions of the Persian Empire, such as the province of Judah (Ezra 5:8) or Babylon (Daniel 2:48). The term implies a governed territory with its own leadership, often under the authority of a satrap or governor appointed by the king. Its usage is almost exclusively in the post-exilic books of Ezra and Daniel, reflecting the Jewish experience under imperial administration.
Biblical Usage
This word is used 11 times, solely in the books of Ezra and Daniel, which are set during the Persian period. It consistently describes the administrative provinces of empires, particularly Persia. For example, it refers to the 'province of Judah' (Ezra 5:8) and the 'province of Babylon' where Daniel was appointed a high official (Daniel 2:48-49). The context is always governmental, detailing decrees, taxes, and administrative structures, as seen in the search for a royal decree in the 'house of the archives' in the province of Media (Ezra 6:2).
Etymology
The word מְדִינָה (H4083) is an Aramaic form corresponding to the Hebrew מְדִינָה (H4082), both deriving from the root דִּין (dîn), meaning 'to judge' or 'to govern.' This root connection highlights the concept of a province as a jurisdiction or a governed territory. Cognates appear in other Semitic languages, reinforcing the idea of a ruled district. The Aramaic form's prevalence in Ezra and Daniel reflects the linguistic influence of the imperial context on the biblical text.
Semantic Range
While primarily an administrative term, מְדִינָה gains theological significance in the context of God's sovereignty over human empires. Its use in Daniel and Ezra shows God's people living under foreign rule, yet still under God's ultimate authority. The 'province' becomes the setting where Jewish identity and faithfulness are tested and where God providentially works through pagan administrations, as when Darius issues a decree to support the Jerusalem temple (Ezra 6:1-12). It reminds readers that God's purposes are accomplished within and through human political structures.
In the ancient Near East, especially under the Persian Empire, a מְדִינָה was a vital unit of imperial control, responsible for taxation, conscription, and local administration. This differs from a modern nation-state, as provinces were semi-autonomous regions with local customs but ultimate loyalty to a distant emperor. Understanding this helps explain the bureaucratic processes in Ezra, like searching archives (Ezra 6:1-2), and the high political rank Daniel attained in Babylon (Daniel 2:48).
אֶרֶץ (ʾereṣ, H776) — A broader term for 'land' or 'country,' not specifically an administrative division. גּוֹי (gôy, H1471) — Primarily means 'nation' or 'people,' focusing on ethnic or political identity rather than a governed district. נַחֲלָה (naḥălâ, H5159) — Refers to an 'inheritance' or 'possession,' often of land given by God, not an imperial province.
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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