Fox in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(Heb. shu'al). Probably the jackal is the animal signified in
almost all the passages in the Old Testament where the Hebrew
term occurs. Though both foxes and jackals abound in Israel,
the shu'alim (foxes) of Jud 15:4 are evidently jackals and not
foxes, for the former animal is gregarious, whereas the latter
is solitary in its habits; and Samson could not, for that
reason, have easily caught three hundred foxes, but it was
easy to catch that number of jackals, which are concealed by
hundreds in caves and ruins of Syria. It is not probable,
however, that Samson sent out the whole three hundred at once.
With respect to the jackals and foxes of Israel, there is no
doubt that the common jackal of the country is the Canis
aureus, which may be heard every night in the villages. It is
like a medium-sized dog, with a head like a wolf, and is of a
bright-yellow color. These beasts devour the bodies of the
dead, and even dig them up from their graves.
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