Hadad in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
A name often recurring in the Syrian and Edomite dynasties,
meaning the sun; so applied as the official title to the
king, as supreme on earth as the sun is in the sky. It
appears in Ben-hadad, son, i.e. worshipper, of Hadad; Hadad-
ezer, helped by Hadad. It appears as Hadar. frontHADAR.)
(Genesis 25:15; compare 1 Chronicles 1:30; 1 Chronicles
1:50). Nicolaus of Damascus (Fragm. 31), friend of Augustus
Caesar (Josephus, Ant. 7:5, sec. 2), confirms 2 Samuel 8:3
as to David's defeating Hadadezer or Hadarezer, king of
Zobah, "when he went to recover his border at the river
Euphrates"; Nicolaus says, "a certain Hadad, a native
Syrian, had great power, ruling over Damascus and all Syria
except. Phoenicia (this accords with 2 Samuel 8:5, 'the
Syrians of Damascus came to support Hadadezer,' being his
vassals); he contended against David king of Judea in many
battles; in the last, which was by the Euphrates, he
suffered defeat (making his third defeat: 2 Samuel 8:3; 2
Samuel 8:5; 2 Samuel 10:18), showing himself a prince of the
greatest prowess."
1. Son of Ishmael (Genesis 25:15). The Attaei,
Attene, Chateni, on W. of Persian gulf, seem his descendants
(Ptol. 6:7, section 15; Plin. 6:32). Hadad, a mountain
belonging to TEMA on the borders of the Syrian desert N. of
el-Medeenah, corresponds to the dwelling of this tribe.
2. King of Edom; conquered Midian on the field of
Moab (Genesis 36:35); Avith was his capital. (See AVITH.)
3. King of Edom (Pan was his capital: Genesis
36:39); probably living when Moses wrote, for Moses does not
record his death as he does that of his predecessors; last
of the kings. In the later written 1 Chronicles 1:50 Hadad's
death is recorded. The dukes that follow were not
successors, but hereditary sheikhs who chose one emir or
king to preside. Hadad's death does not therefore, as
Smith's Bible Dictionary supposes, mark a change to the
dukedom. (See EDOM.) "Hadad could hardly have been living
after the times of the kings of Israel, to which period
those who consider Genesis 36:31-48 an interpolation would
assign the genealogy" (Speaker's Commentary).
4. Of the royal house of Edom (1 Kings 11:14, etc.).
In childhood escaped the massacre of every Edomite male by
Joab, and fled into Egypt. Pharaoh gave him house, victuals,
and land, and his wife Tahpenes the queen's sister in
marriage, who bore him Genubath. At David's death, in spite
of Pharaoh's entreaties he left Egypt for his own country.
The Septuagint read Edom for Aram (Syria), 1 Kings 11:25,
thus making Hadad succeed in his attempt to regain rule over
Edom, from whence he harassed Israel; but the Septuagint
omits all as to Rezon, so that its authority is worth little
here. Josephus (Ant. 8:7, section 6) reads as KJV; Hadad
thus having failed to recover Edom joined Rezon in assailing
Israel and received from him a portion of Syria; "he reigned
over Syria" refers to Rezon, and is a repetition of verse
24.
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