Horn in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
qeren. Trumpets were perhaps at first merely horns
perforated at the tip. In Joshua 6:4-5, instead of "trumpets
of rams' horns," translated "Jubilee trumpets." Rams' horns
would scarcely have been effective enough. Hajobeel, from
jabal "to stream violently with noise," is the name for a
long wind instrument like a horn. Used for summoning to war,
or for public proclamations (Judges 3:27; Judges 7:18). The
horn was also used for a flask to contain oil (1 Samuel
16:1); also to contain stibium or antimony to beautify the
eyelashes and eyelids of women; from whence Job's daughter
drew her name Keren-happuch, "horn of stibium," in contrast
to Job's "horn defiled in the dust" formerly (Job 16:15).
The "horn" being the instrument of the oxen's
strength is the symbol of power (1 Kings 22:11). The "horns
of the (See ALTAR" were simply projections from the four
corners. The peak of a hill is called a horn. Isaiah 5:1, "a
very fruitful hill" Hebrew "a horn of the son of oil," as
the Swiss Shreckhorn, Wetterhorn, Celtic cairn. In Habakkuk
3:4, "He had horns coming out of His hand" means, He had the
emblems of power wielded by His hand (L. de Dieu), or else
rays" (i.e. lightnings): Psalm 18:8 (Maurer). So Exodus
34:29-30; Exodus 34:35, qaaran, "to horn," is used in the
sense to emit rays. Livingstone mentions a horn-shaped cap
as worn by Africans; married Druse women wear silver horns
on their heads.
The ram with two horns (Daniel 8:3) represents the
Medo-Persian double power. The "notable horn" of the "he
goat" (Daniel 8:5) is Alexander the Great who on coins is
represented with horns. The four horns in Zechariah 1:18
represent the four ruling powers of the world, to be
superseded finally by Messiah's kingdom: Babylon, Medo-
Persia, Greece, and Rome. (On "the little horn" of the third
and of the fourth world powers (Daniel 7:8; Daniel 8:9).
(See ANTICHRIST.) On Egyptian and Roman coins, and in
Assyrian sculptures, are figures of gods with horns,
symbolical of power. "A horn of salvation" means mighty
instrument of salvation (Luke 1:69).
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