קִיר חֶרֶשׂ
Kir-Cheres or Kir-Chareseth, a place in Moab
Definition
Kir-Cheres (also spelled Kir-Chareseth, Kir-Haraseth, or Kir-Heres) is a fortified city in the ancient kingdom of Moab. Its name, meaning 'fortress of earthenware' or 'pottery wall,' likely refers to its formidable brick or clay-built fortifications. In the Bible, it serves as a key Moabite stronghold, notably as the last refuge of the Moabite king during the campaign of the Israelite coalition in 2 Kings 3:25. The prophets Isaiah and Jeremiah use its name poetically to represent the entire nation of Moab in oracles of judgment, lamenting its coming desolation (Isaiah 16:7, 11; Jeremiah 48:31, 36).
Biblical Usage
This proper noun is used exclusively in prophetic and historical contexts concerning Moab. It appears five times: once historically in 2 Kings 3:25, where it is the final city besieged in a war. The other four occurrences are in prophetic oracles—twice in Isaiah 16 and twice in Jeremiah 48—where the city's name stands as a symbol for the entire nation facing divine judgment. The usage shifts from a literal geographic location to a potent symbol of Moabite pride and its impending downfall.
Etymology
The name is a compound of two Hebrew words: קִיר (qîyr, H7023), meaning 'wall' or 'fortress,' and חֶרֶשׂ (cheres, H2789), meaning 'earthenware,' 'pottery,' or 'clay.' The feminine form קִיר חֲרֶשֶׂת (qîyr chăreseth) also appears. The name likely describes the city's construction, perhaps from sun-dried mud bricks, common in the region, giving it the sense of a 'clay fortress' or 'pottery-walled city.'
Semantic Range
Kir-Cheres is theologically significant as a symbol of human fortification and pride that is ultimately vulnerable before God's judgment. Its mention in the prophets underscores the theme that no earthly stronghold, however seemingly impregnable, can provide security against divine decree. Understanding this name enriches the reading of oracles against Moab, highlighting the futility of trusting in human-made defenses (Isaiah 16:7, Jeremiah 48:31) and the certainty of God's justice upon arrogant nations.
In the ancient Near East, major cities were often fortified with walls made of mudbrick (sun-dried clay) on stone foundations. The name 'fortress of earthenware' would have been a descriptive, perhaps even proverbial, reference to such a common construction method, emphasizing both its strength as a fortress and its inherent fragility as baked clay. For Moab, it represented a primary center of power and refuge.
Ar-Moab (אַר מוֹאָב, H7594) — Another key fortified city in Moab, often mentioned alongside Kir as a principal stronghold. Dibon (דִּיבֹן, H1769) — A major Moabite city, sometimes a royal residence, distinct from the fortress-city of Kir-Cheres.
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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