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Bible Lexiconתַּחְפַּנְחֵס
BDB / Strong's (1906 / 1890)H8471noun

תַּחְפַּנְחֵס

Tachpanchêç[takh-pan-khace']

Tachpanches, Techaphneches or Tachpenes, a place in Egypt

Definition

תַּחְפַּנְחֵס (Tachpanchêç) is a proper noun referring to an ancient Egyptian city, identified as a fortress-city in the northeastern Nile Delta. In the Bible, it appears as a significant location where Judean refugees fled after the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem (Jeremiah 43:7-9). The city is also mentioned in prophetic oracles of judgment against Egypt, where it is listed among the cities that will experience divine punishment (Ezekiel 30:18). The name is spelled in variant forms (e.g., תַּחְפְּנֵס in Jeremiah 2:16) but consistently refers to the same strategic Egyptian site.

Biblical Usage

This word is used exclusively in the prophetic books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel, always as a geographical proper noun. In Jeremiah, it appears in narratives about Judean refugees who escape to Egypt (Jeremiah 43:7-9) and in prophecies condemning Judah's alliances with Egypt (Jeremiah 2:16, 46:14). In Ezekiel, it is listed in a prophecy against Egyptian cities (Ezekiel 30:18). All seven occurrences highlight Tachpanches as a place of refuge, political intrigue, and eventual judgment.

Etymology

The name is of Egyptian derivation, likely originating from the Egyptian phrase 'Djanet' or 'Tjeku,' referring to a frontier fortress in the eastern Delta. The Hebrew variants (תְּחַפְנְחֵס, תַּחְפְּנֵס) reflect different phonetic adaptations of the Egyptian name into Hebrew, common when borrowing foreign place-names. It has no known Hebrew root, being a direct loanword.

Semantic Range

Tachpanches is theologically significant as a symbol of misplaced trust and disobedience. When Judean refugees fled there against God's command (Jeremiah 42-43), it represented reliance on human political alliances (Egypt) rather than on God's protection. Its inclusion in judgments against Egypt (Ezekiel 30:18) underscores God's sovereignty over all nations. Understanding this location enriches reading by highlighting the consequences of seeking security outside of God's will.

In its original setting, Tachpanches was a known Egyptian fortress-city, likely modern Tell Defenneh, serving as a military and administrative center on Egypt's eastern frontier. For ancient Israelites, it symbolized a place of potential asylum but also of foreign influence and idolatry. Its mention would evoke images of Egypt's power and the risks of cultural assimilation, differing from a modern generic understanding of a 'city.'

מִצְרַיִם (Mitsrayim, H4714) — the broader country of Egypt, whereas Tachpanches is a specific city within it. נֹף (Noph, H5297) — another major Egyptian city (Memphis), distinct in location and prophetic context.

Word Details

Strong's NumberH8471
Part of Speechnoun
Hebrewתַּחְפַּנְחֵס
TransliterationTachpanchêç
Pronunciationtakh-pan-khace'
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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