תִּמֹּר
(architectural) a palm-like pilaster (i.e. umbellate)
Definition
The Hebrew word תִּמֹּר (timmôr) refers to a stylized palm tree motif used as an architectural ornament in the Old Testament. It specifically denotes carved palm tree designs on the walls, doors, and pillars of sacred buildings, most notably Solomon's Temple (1 Kings 6:29, 32, 35) and the visionary temple described by Ezekiel (Ezekiel 40:16, 22, 26). This term is distinct from the living palm tree (תָּמָר, H8558), representing instead an artistic, symbolic representation of one. Its usage is almost exclusively architectural, depicting a recurring decorative pattern that conveyed specific symbolic meaning within Israelite worship spaces.
Biblical Usage
This word is used 16 times in the Old Testament, almost entirely within descriptions of sacred architecture. It appears in the historical accounts of Solomon's Temple construction in 1 Kings 6-7 and 2 Chronicles 3:5, and in the detailed visionary architecture of Ezekiel's temple (Ezekiel 40-41). The pattern is consistently applied to interior walls, the surfaces of doors, and the panels of the stands for the bronze basins, indicating it was a primary decorative theme for holy places. For example, 1 Kings 6:29 describes carving 'cherubim, palm trees, and open flowers' all over the walls of the inner sanctuary.
Etymology
תִּמֹּר (timmôr) is the masculine singular or collective form derived from the same root as תָּמָר (tāmār, H8558), meaning 'palm tree.' The feminine form is תִּמֹּרָה (timmôrâ). The development from the concrete noun for the tree to this term for an architectural representation shows a shift from a natural object to a crafted religious symbol, retaining the core idea of the palm's form but applying it to art and design.
Semantic Range
The תִּמֹּר motif is theologically significant as a symbol of life, victory, and righteousness within God's dwelling place (Psalm 92:12). Its pervasive use in the temple's decor connected the house of God with themes of beauty, fertility, and eternal life, which the palm tree represented in the ancient Near East. Understanding this enriches reading by showing that the temple's design was a theological statement, visually proclaiming the life-giving presence of God among His people. The motif's reappearance in Ezekiel's future temple vision (Ezekiel 40:16) reinforces its enduring symbolic connection to divine order and blessing.
In the ancient Near East, the palm tree was a common artistic motif symbolizing fertility, vitality, and paradise. By incorporating this widespread cultural symbol into the Jerusalem Temple's architecture, Israel's worship was contextualized within its cultural milieu, yet consecrated for Yahweh. The specific 'palm-like pilaster' or umbellate (cluster) design was a recognizable artistic convention, differing from a modern reader's simple mental picture of a tree by being a highly stylized, repeated ornamental pattern.
תָּמָר (tāmār, H8558) — The living date palm tree, not an architectural carving. דֶּקֶל (deqel, H8560) — An Aramaic word for 'palm tree' used in the book of Daniel.
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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