Jair in Wikipedia
(Hebrew יאיר Ya'ir) was a man from Gilead (Tribe of Manasseh,
east of the River Jordan), who judged Israel for twenty-two
years, after the death of Tola. His inheritance was in Gilead
through the line of Machir, the son of Manasseh. Jair was the
son of Segub, the son of Hezron the Jew through the daughter
of Machir (1 Chronicles 2). According to Judges 10:3-5, Jair
had thirty sons, who rode thirty ass colts, and thirty
'cities' in Gilead which came to be known as Havoth-Jair. The
word chawwoth ('tent encampments') occurs only in this context
(Numbers 32:41; Deuteronomy 3:14; Judges 10:4), and is a
legacy word remaining from the early nomadic stage of Hebrew
culture. W. Ewing suggests that Kamon probably corresponds to
Kamun taken by the Seleucid king Antiochus III, on his march
from Pella to Gephrun (Polybius Book V.70:12).
Jair died and was buried in Kamon.
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