Hare in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
arnebeth Reckoned unclean on the ground that it "chews the
cud, but divideth not the hoof" (Leviticus 11:6; Deuteronomy
14:7). It brings up from the (esophagus and chews again its
food; but there is no genuine rumination, neither it nor the
hyrax ("coney") or shaaphan have the special stomach of the
ruminants. Rodent animals, as the hare and the hyrax, keep
down the undue growth of their teeth, which grow during
life, by grinding with their jaws. The sacred legislator did
not design the classification of a scientific naturalist or
a comparative anatomist, but to furnish a popular mode of
recognizing animals the flesh of which was not to be eaten.
The rule in Deuteronomy 17:27, "whatsoever goeth upon his
paws" (as the dog, cat, and beasts of prey), sufficiently
excludes from the clean the hyrax and the hare. The Parsees
still abominate the hare.
The hare, though having a divided foot, has not a
cloven hoof, which was a requisite for legal cleanness. True
ruminants have four stomachs, molar teeth, and a jawbone
suited for the circular movement of chewing the cud. The
hare has none of these marks, and has in the upper jaw
incisor teeth, which ruminants have not. But hares retain
the cropped food within the hollows of their cheeks and
masticate it at leisure, which in phenomenal language is
"chewing the cud," and is so described by even so close an
observer of nature as the poet Cowper. The ancient Britons
rejected it as food. The Palestinian hare, Lepus Syriacus,
was of a fur buff or yellowish-grey color, the hare of the
desert (Lepus Sinaiticus) darker and smaller. The rabbit
(Lepus cuniculus) seems to be unknown in Syria and Israel.
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