Havvoth-jair
Havvoth-jair is a region mentioned in the Old Testament, located in the region of Bashan in modern-day Israel. Known today as Qamm. It appears across 6 verses in Scripture.
Biblical History
Havvoth-jair — meaning "the villages of Jair" or "the tent villages of Jair" — refers to a group of settlements in the region of Gilead and Bashan east of the Jordan River, associated with Jair son of Manasseh. In Numbers 32:41, Jair is said to have conquered a series of Amorite villages and renamed them Havvoth-jair, establishing Israelite claims east of the Jordan. Deuteronomy 3:14 specifies sixty cities in the region of Argob in Bashan that Jair took and named after himself. Judges 10:3–4 introduces a different Jair — a judge of Israel from Gilead — who had thirty sons riding thirty donkeys and who controlled thirty cities in Gilead called Havvoth-jair, presenting a picture of prosperous clan leadership. In 1 Kings 4:13, the district of Havvoth-jair is listed as part of Solomon's administrative division of Gilead, confirming that the settlements remained a recognized geographical entity through the monarchic period. The name's persistence across multiple centuries of biblical narrative reflects the enduring importance of this cluster of Transjordanian communities within the tribal inheritance of Manasseh and the broader Israelite occupation of the lands east of the Jordan.
Archaeological & Historical Notes
Havvoth-jair designates a cluster of settlements rather than a single site, scattered across the Gilead and Bashan plateaus of the Transjordan in what is today northern Jordan and southern Syria. The region has been surveyed as part of broader archaeological work in the Jordanian highlands, revealing Iron Age settlements consistent with Israelite occupation east of the Jordan. The Decapolis cities of the Roman period overlay many of these earlier Iron Age sites, complicating direct identification of individual Havvoth-jair settlements. The general area around modern Irbid and the northern Jordanian highlands corresponds to the biblical geography, and survey pottery from Iron Age I and II periods attests to the settlement density implied by the biblical accounts.
Verse Appearances (6)
Sources: ISBE Encyclopedia · OpenBible Geocoding (CC BY) · Pleiades Gazetteer View all →