Hare in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
har ('arnebheth (Lev 11:6; Dt 14:7); compare Arabic 'arnab,
"hare"): This animal is mentioned only in the lists of
unclean animals in Leviticus and Deuteronomy, Where it
occurs along with the camel, the coney and the swine. The
camel, the hare and the coney are unclean, `because they
chew the cud but part not the hoof,' the swine, "because he
parteth the hoof .... but cheweth not the cud." The hare and
the coney are not ruminants, but might be supposed to be
from their habit of almost continually moving their jaws.
Both are freely eaten by the Arabs. Although 'arnebheth
occurs only in the two places cited, there is no doubt that
it is the hare. Septuagint has dasupous, "rough-footed,"
which, while not the commonest Greek word (lagos), refers to
the remarkable fact that in hares and rabbits the soles of
the feet are densely covered with hair. 'Arnab, which is the
common Arabic word for "hare," is from the same root as the
Hebrew 'arnebheth.
Lev 11:4-7: verse 4, English Versions of the Bible "camel";
Septuagint ton kamelon; Vulgate (Jerome's Latin Bible, 390-
405 A.D.) camelus; Hebrew ha-gamal. Lev 11:5, English
Versions of the Bible "coney"; Septuagint ton dasupoda;
Vulgate, choerogryllus; Hebrew ha-shapan. Lev 11:6, English
Versions of the Bible "hare"; Septuagint ton choirogruillion
Vulgate, lepus; Hebrew ha-arnebeth. Lev 11:7, English
Versions of the Bible "swine"; Septuagint ton hun; Vulgate,
sus; Hebrew ha-chazir.
Dt 14:7: English Versions of the Bible "camel"; Septuagint
ton kamelon Vulgate, camelum; Hebrew hagamal; English
Versions of the Bible "hare"; Septuagint dasupoda; Vulgate,
leporem; Hebrew ha'arnebeth; English Versions of the Bible
"coney"; Septuagint choirogrullion; Vulgate, choerogryllum;
Hebrew hashaphan.
Dt 14:8: English Versions of the Bible "swine"; Septuagint
ton hun Vulgate, sus; Hebrew hacheziyr.
It is evident from the above and from the meanings of
dasupous and chorogrullios as given in Liddell and Scott,
that the order of Septuagint in Lev 11:5,6 does not follow
the Hebrew, but has apparently assimilated the order of that
of Dt 14:7,8. In Ps 104:18, Septuagint has chorogrullios for
shaphan; also in Prov 30:26.
Since the word "coney," which properly means "rabbit," has
been applied to the hyrax, so, in America at least, the word
"rabbit" is widely used for various species of hare, e.g.
the gray rabbit and the jack-rabbit, both of which are
hares. Hares have longer legs and ears and are swifter than
rabbits. Their young are hairy and have their eyes open,
while rabbits are born naked and blind. Hares are widely
distributed in the Northern Hemisphere, and there is one
species in South America. Rabbits are apparently native to
the Western Mediterranean countries, although they have been
distributed by man all over the world.
Lepus syriacus, the common hare of Syria and Israel, differs
somewhat from the European hare. Lepus judeae is cited by
Tristram from Northeastern Israel, and he also notes three
other species from the extreme south.
Alfred Ely Day
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