שֵׂעִיר
Seir, a mountain of Idumaea and its aboriginal occupants, also one in Palestine
Definition
Seir is a proper noun referring primarily to a mountainous region in the southern Transjordan, later known as Edom (Genesis 32:3, Genesis 36:8-9). It is the territory inhabited by the Horites before Esau's descendants, the Edomites, settled there (Genesis 36:20-21). The name can also refer to the mountain itself, a specific location within that region, and, by extension, to the people who lived there. In a different context, a separate 'Mount Seir' is mentioned as a location on the border of Judah in the Promised Land (Joshua 15:10).
Biblical Usage
The word is used 38 times, predominantly in the Pentateuch (Genesis, Deuteronomy) and the historical books (Joshua, Judges, Chronicles). It consistently denotes the land of Edom and its inhabitants, often in contexts of geography, genealogy, and Israel's interactions with Edom. Key passages include its description as Esau's homeland (Genesis 32:3, 33:14) and as a landmark during Israel's wilderness journey (Deuteronomy 1:2, 2:1).
Etymology
Derived from the root שָׂעִר (śāʿîr, H8181), meaning 'hairy' or 'rough.' The name Seir likely describes the rugged, mountainous terrain of the region. It is formed like the word for 'he-goat' (שָׂעִיר, H8163), which shares the same root and connotes shagginess.
Semantic Range
Seir is theologically significant as the territory given to Esau (Deuteronomy 2:5), representing God's sovereign distribution of land and the fulfillment of His promise that Jacob and Esau would become two nations (Genesis 25:23). Its portrayal often contrasts with Israel, highlighting themes of sibling rivalry, divine election, and the ongoing tension between the two peoples, which is prophetically addressed (e.g., Obadiah). Understanding Seir enriches the narrative of God's covenant faithfulness to the line of Jacob.
In its original setting, Seir was not just a geographic label but a marker of ethnic and political identity. For ancient Israelites, it specifically meant the land and people of Edom, a neighboring kingdom with a complex relationship of shared ancestry and frequent conflict. The 'rough' etymology would have immediately evoked the region's known, formidable landscape to the original audience.
Edom (אֱדוֹם, H123) — The nation descended from Esau, synonymous with the territory of Seir. Horites (חֹרִי, H2752) — The earlier inhabitants of Mount Seir before the Edomites.
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.
Full methodology & sources →