מְעוּנִי
a Meunite, or inhabitant of Maon (only in plural)
Definition
The term מְעוּנִי refers to a 'Meunite,' a member of a people group associated with the region of Maon. In the Old Testament, it appears exclusively in the plural form, indicating the people collectively rather than an individual. The Meunites are depicted as a neighboring group against whom Israel fought, as seen when God helped King Uzziah defeat them (2 Chronicles 26:7). They are also listed among the returning exiles in the post-exilic community (Ezra 2:50; Nehemiah 7:52), suggesting some of them became part of Israel.
Biblical Usage
This word is used in three passages across historical and post-exilic books. In 2 Chronicles 26:7, it describes a people group defeated by King Uzziah of Judah, highlighting military conflict. In Ezra 2:50 and Nehemiah 7:52, it appears in lists of families who returned from the Babylonian exile, indicating their integration into Judah. The usage shows a shift from external adversaries to assimilated community members.
Etymology
Derived from the Hebrew root מָעוֹן (H4584), meaning 'habitation' or 'dwelling,' מְעוּנִי is a gentilic noun (patrial) indicating origin from Maon, a place name. The variant מְעִינִי suggests a possible dialectical or textual variation. The root conveys the idea of a settled location, linking the people to their territorial homeland.
Semantic Range
The Meunites illustrate God's sovereignty over Israel's enemies and His grace in incorporating outsiders into His people. Their defeat under Uzziah demonstrates divine assistance in fulfilling Israel's territorial promises (2 Chronicles 26:7), while their inclusion among the returnees reflects the post-exilic restoration of a diverse community, hinting at themes of inclusion and redemption that echo broader biblical narratives.
In the ancient Near East, the Meunites were likely a nomadic or semi-nomadic group from the region south of Judah, possibly linked to the Edomites or other Arabian tribes. Their presence as both adversaries and later as part of the Jewish community reflects the fluid ethnic and political boundaries of the time, where conquest and exile led to shifting identities and assimilation.
אֱדוֹם (ʼĔḏôm, H123) — refers to the Edomites, a distinct neighboring people group often in conflict with Israel; מוֹאָב (Môʼâḇ, H4124) — refers to the Moabites, another neighboring group east of the Dead Sea.
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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