Badger in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
baj'er: tachash: The word tachash occurs in the descriptions
of the tabernacle in Ex 25; 26; 35; 36 and 39, in the
directions for moving the tabernacle as given in Nu 4, and
in only one other passage, Ezek 16:10, where Jerusalem is
spoken of as a maiden clothed and adorned by her Lord. In
nearly all these passages the word tachash occurs with `or,
"skin," rendered: the King James Version "badgers' skins,"
the Revised Version (British and American) "sealskin," the
Revised Version, margin "porpoise-skin," Septuagint dermata
huakinthina. In all the passages cited in Ex and Nu these
skins are mentioned as being used for coverings of the
tabernacle; in Ezek 16:10, for shoes or sandals. The
Septuagint rendering would mean purple or blue skins, which
however is not favored by Talmudic writers or by modern
grammarians, who incline to believe that tachash is the name
of an animal. The rendering, "badger," is favored by the
Talmudic writers and by the possible etymological connection
of the word with the Latin taxus and the German Dachs. The
main objection seems to be that badgers' skins would
probably not have been easily available to the Israelites.
The badger, Meles taxus, while fairly abundant in Lebanon
and Anti-Lebanon, does not seem to occur in Sinai or Egypt.
A seal, Monachus albiventer (Arabic fukmeh), the porpoise,
Phocoena comrnunis, and the common dolphin, Delphinus
delphis, are all found in the Mediterranean. The dugong,
Halicore dugong, inhabits the Indian Ocean and adjoining
waters from the Red Sea to Australia. The Arabic tukhas or
dukhas is near to tachash and is applied to the dolphin,
which is also called delfin. It may be used also for the
porpoise or even the seal, and is said by Tristram and
others to be applied to the dugong. The statement of
Gesenius (Boston, 1850, under the word "tachash") that the
Arabs of Sinai wear sandals of dugong skin is confirmed by
recent travelers, and is of interest with reference to Ezek
16:10, ".... shod thee with badgers' skin" (King James
Version). The dugong is a marine animal from 5 to 9 ft. in
length, frequenting the shore and feeding upon seaweed. It
belongs to the order Sirenia. While outwardly resembling
Cetacea (whales and porpoises), the Sirenia are really more
allied to the Ungulata, or hoofed animals. The dugong of the
Indian Ocean and the manatee of the Atlantic and of certain
rivers of Africa and South America, are the only living
representatives of the Sirenia. A third species, the sea-cow
of Behring Sea, became extinct in the 18th century. The seal
and porpoise of the Revised Version (British and American),
the dolphin, and the dugong are all of about the same size
and all inhabit the seas bordering on Egypt and Sinai, so
that all are possible candidates for identification with the
tachash. Of the four, recent opinion seems most to favor the
dugong.
Mr. S. M. Perlmann has suggested (Zoologist, set. 4, XII,
256, 1908) that the okapi is the animal indicated by
tachash.
Gesenius (Leipzig, 1905) cites Bondi (Aegyptiaca, i. ff) who
adduces the Egyptian root t-ch-s and makes the expression
`or tachash mean "soft-dressed skin." This suits the context
in every passage and is very promising explanation.
Alfred Ely-Day
Read More about Badger in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE