תַּנּוּר
a fire-pot
Definition
The Hebrew word תַּנּוּר (tannûwr) primarily refers to a portable clay oven or furnace used for baking and cooking in the ancient Near East. In most biblical contexts, it describes a household oven for baking bread, as seen in Leviticus 2:4 and Leviticus 7:9, where grain offerings are prepared. It can also signify a larger, industrial furnace for pottery or metalworking, such as the 'iron furnace' symbolizing Egyptian oppression in Deuteronomy 4:20. In a dramatic theophany, it appears as a 'smoking fire pot' in God's covenant ceremony with Abram (Genesis 15:17).
Biblical Usage
תַּנּוּר is used 15 times across the Torah, Historical Books, and Prophets. Its most common usage is for domestic ovens in ritual and purity laws (Leviticus 2:4; 11:35). It appears in judgments, like the prophecy of scarce bread where ten women bake in one oven (Leviticus 26:26), and in the plague narrative where frogs invade ovens (Exodus 8:3). In Nehemiah, it names a tower or district, 'the Tower of the Ovens' (Nehemiah 3:11; 12:38), likely indicating a bakers' quarter.
Etymology
Derived from the root נִיר (nîr, H5216), meaning 'to till' or 'to break up soil,' the word's development likely connects to the process of constructing these ovens from clay earth. Cognates exist in other Semitic languages (e.g., Akkadian 'tinnūru,' Arabic 'tannūr'), all referring to an oven or furnace, indicating a shared cultural technology across the region.
Semantic Range
תַּנּוּר holds theological significance as a symbol of both divine presence and judgment. In Genesis 15:17, the smoking fire pot represents God's holy, consuming presence passing through the covenant sacrifice. Conversely, it symbolizes severe affliction and refining judgment, as in the 'iron furnace' of Egypt (Deuteronomy 4:20) and the metaphorical furnace of suffering (Isaiah 48:10). This duality enriches readings of God as a refining fire who is both intimately present and purifyingly holy.
The תַּנּוּר was a dome-shaped clay oven, typically heated with burning dung, wood, or charcoal. Bread was baked by slapping dough onto its hot interior walls, a common daily household task. Unlike modern enclosed ovens, it was often portable and could be used for pottery firing. Understanding this clarifies texts about ritual purity (e.g., Leviticus 11:35, where an oven becomes unclean) and the domestic scale of the judgments in Leviticus 26:26.
כִּבְשָׁן (kibshān, H3536) — A larger, fixed furnace or kiln, often for smelting metals (Genesis 19:28). אַתּוּן (ʾattûn, H861) — A furnace for intense heat, typically in smelting or symbolic contexts (Daniel 3:6).
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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