Hyena in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
hi-e'-na (tsabhua` (Jer 12:9); Septuagint huaine (Jer 12:9;
Ecclesiasticus 13:18); compare Arabic dab` or dabu`,
"hyaena"; compare tsebho`im, Zeboim (1 Sam 13:18; Neh
11:34); also compare tsibh`on, Zibeon (Gen 36:2,14,20; 1 Ch
1:38); but not tsebhoyim, Zeboiim (Gen 10:19; 14:2, etc.)):
English Versions of the Bible does not contain the word
"hyena," except in Ecclesiasticus 13:18, "What peace is
there between the hyena and the dog? and what; peace between
the rich man and the poor?" In Jer 12:9, where the Hebrew
has ha-`ayiT tsabhua` (the Revised Version (British and
American) "a speckled bird of prey"), Septuagint has
spelaion huaines, "a hyena's den," as if from a Hebrew
original having me`arah, "cave," instead of ha-`ayiT,
"bird." The root tsabha` may mean "to seize as prey"
(compare Arabic seb`, "lion" or "rapacious animal"), or "to
dip" or "to dye" (compare Arabic cabagh, "to dye"), hence,
the two translations of tsabhua` as "hyena" and as
"speckled" (Vulgate versicolor).
The hyena of Israel is the striped hyena (Hyaena striata)
which ranges from India to North Africa. The striped, the
spotted, and the brown hyenas constitute a distinct family
of the order of Carnivora, having certain peculiarities of
dentition and having four toes on each foot, instead of four
behind and five in front, as in most of the order. The hyena
is a nocturnal animal, rarely seen though fairly abundant,
powerful but cowardly, a feeder on carrion and addicted to
grave-robbing. The last habit in particular has won it the
abhorrence of the natives of the countries which it
inhabits. In the passage cited in Ecclus, it is to be noted
that it is to the hyena that the rich man is compared. The
jaws and teeth of the hyena are exceedingly strong and
fitted for crushing bones which have resisted the efforts of
dogs and jackals. Its dens are in desolate places and are
littered with fragments of skeletons. "Is my heritage unto
me as a speckled bird of prey?" (Jer 12:9) becomes a more
striking passage if the Septuagint is followed, "Is my
heritage unto me as a hyena's den?"
Shaqq-ud-Diba`, "Cleft of the hyenas," is the name of a
valley north of Wadi-ul-Qelt, and Wadi-Abu-Diba` (of similar
meaning) is the name of an affluent of Wadi-ul-Qelt. Either
of these, or possibly Wadi-ul-Qelt itself, may be the valley
of Zeboim (valley of hyenas) of 1 Sam 13:18.
The name of Zibeon the Horite (Gen 36:2, etc.) is more
doubtfully connected with "hyena."
Alfred Ely Day
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