מְמוּכָן
Memucan or Momucan, a Persian satrap
Definition
Memucan is the name of one of the seven Persian princes or satraps who served as advisors to King Ahasuerus (Xerxes I). As a high-ranking official, he appears exclusively in the Book of Esther, where he is the first to speak in the royal council concerning Queen Vashti's disobedience (Esther 1:16). His counsel, which leads to the queen's deposition and a royal decree, sets in motion the chain of events that creates the need for a new queen, ultimately paving the way for Esther's rise. The name is consistently used to refer to this specific individual in all three of its occurrences.
Biblical Usage
The word מְמוּכָן is used only in the Book of Esther (Esther 1:14, 1:16, 1:21). In each instance, it functions strictly as a proper name identifying the Persian official Memucan. His usage is entirely within the narrative context of the royal court's deliberation over Queen Vashti's actions, and he is portrayed as a key, vocal advisor whose proposal is accepted and enacted by the king.
Etymology
The name Memucan is of Persian origin, not Hebrew. The Hebrew text itself notes a possible transposed variant, מוֹמֻכָן (Mowmukan). As a loanword, its exact Persian meaning is uncertain, but it identifies an individual within the Persian imperial administration, consistent with the book's setting in the Persian court.
Semantic Range
While the name Memucan itself is not theologically loaded, his role is significant for narrative theology. His counsel demonstrates the flawed, reactive wisdom of human courts in contrast to God's unseen providence. His decree, intended to solve a domestic crisis, inadvertently creates the circumstances that allow Esther to become queen and later save her people. Thus, he becomes an unwitting instrument in God's sovereign plan to preserve Israel, as highlighted in the theme of divine reversal common in Esther.
Memucan is identified as one of the "seven princes of Persia and Media" (Esther 1:14), a group of the highest royal advisors who had direct access to the king. This reflects the historical administrative structure of the Persian Empire. His bold advice and the king's immediate acceptance illustrate the absolute power of the Persian monarch and the court dynamics where officials vied for influence. His concern that Vashti's actions would inspire disobedience among all women (Esther 1:17-18) reveals the patriarchal social structures of the time.
There are no direct Hebrew synonyms for this proper name. As a title/role, he could be grouped with other court officials: סָרִיס (sârîys, H5631) — a general term for a high official or eunuch; שַׂר (śar, H8269) — a prince, ruler, or chief.
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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