זְבֻל
Zebul, an Israelite
Definition
Zebul is the name of an Israelite official who served as the governor of Shechem under Abimelech, as recorded in the book of Judges. He is a key secondary figure in the narrative of Abimelech's violent rise to power and the subsequent rebellion against him. Zebul initially remains loyal to Abimelech (Judges 9:30) but later becomes the channel through which Abimelech is informed of a revolt led by Gaal son of Ebed (Judges 9:36-41). His actions directly facilitate Abimelech's brutal suppression of the Shechemite rebellion.
Biblical Usage
The name Zebul is used exclusively in Judges 9, appearing five times within the story of Abimelech's kingship. It is always used as a proper noun referring to the same individual, the governor of Shechem. His usage is entirely narrative, depicting him as a loyalist who reports the treasonous words of Gaal (Judges 9:28, 30) and later assists Abimelech militarily by deceiving Gaal and the men of Shechem (Judges 9:36-41).
Etymology
The name Zebul (זְבֻל) is derived from the common noun זְבוּל (zᵉbûl, H2073), meaning 'dwelling,' 'lofty abode,' or 'habitation.' It is linguistically identical to the word used for God's 'dwelling' in heaven (1 Kings 8:13) and shares a root (ז־ב־ל) with ideas of exaltation and residence. As a personal name, it likely carried a positive connotation of 'exalted dwelling' or 'prince.'
Semantic Range
Zebul's role highlights the theme of flawed human governance and the chaos of the Judges period, where 'everyone did what was right in his own eyes' (Judges 21:25). His loyalty to the usurper Abimelech, a son of Gideon who murdered his brothers, presents a complex picture of political allegiance devoid of moral or divine sanction. The narrative underscores the consequences of rejecting God's rightful rule, using Zebul as an instrument in the cycle of violence and retribution.
As the 'ruler of the city' (Judges 9:30), Zebul held a position of appointed civil and military authority under a regional king (Abimelech). This reflects the political structure of a Canaanite-style city-state within Israel during this turbulent era. His role involved administration, intelligence gathering, and military command, illustrating the blend of Israelite and local Canaanite governance models in Shechem.
None directly applicable as a proper name. The root is shared with זְבוּל (zᵉbûl, H2073) — the common noun meaning 'dwelling' or 'lofty habitation.'
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 →