תּוֹלָד
Tolad, a place in Palestine
Definition
Tolad is a proper noun referring to a settlement in the territory of the tribe of Simeon, located in the Negev region of southern Judah. It is listed among the towns allotted to the tribe of Simeon after the conquest of Canaan, as recorded in Joshua 19:1-9 and the parallel list in 1 Chronicles 4:28-32. The name itself, meaning 'posterity' or 'generation,' likely reflects the hope for the continuation and growth of the community established there. Its mention in these tribal allotment lists serves to document the historical geography of Israel's settlement in the Promised Land.
Biblical Usage
The word Tolad is used only once in the Old Testament, in the context of a geographical list. It appears in 1 Chronicles 4:29 as one of the towns within the inheritance of the tribe of Simeon. This usage is purely locative, identifying a specific place name within a catalog of settlements. The parallel list in Joshua 19:1-9 includes a town with a similar name, Eltolad (H513), which is generally considered to be the same location, with the prefix 'El-' possibly meaning 'God of' or simply being a variant form.
Etymology
The name Tolad (תּוֹלָד) is derived from the Hebrew root יָלַד (yālad, H3205), which means 'to bear,' 'to bring forth,' or 'to beget.' It is a noun form meaning 'generation,' 'descendants,' or 'posterity.' As a place name, it likely carried a sense of 'a place of offspring' or 'a place of future generations,' symbolizing fertility, continuity, and the hope for a lasting community established in that location.
Semantic Range
While Tolad itself is a specific, minor geographical location, its etymological connection to the concept of 'generations' ties it to a major biblical theme: God's covenant faithfulness across successive generations. The naming of a town 'Posterity' within the tribal allotment subtly reinforces the promise to Abraham of land and descendants (Genesis 12:1-3, 15:5). It serves as a tangible, on-the-ground reminder that the possession of the land was not just for the conquest generation but for their children and their children's children, fulfilling God's covenantal promises.
In the ancient Near East, place names often carried descriptive or aspirational meanings, reflecting the environment, a historical event, or a communal hope. Naming a settlement in the arid Negev region 'Tolad' (Posterity) would have been a powerful statement of faith and determination. It expressed the community's desire to not merely survive but to thrive, multiply, and establish a lasting lineage in a challenging environment. This contrasts with a modern understanding of place names, which are often historical artifacts without active semantic meaning to current residents.
Eltolad (ʼEltôwlâd, H513) — The longer form of the same place name, likely with a prefixed divine element ('God of').
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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