Kedar in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
ke'-dar (qedhar; Kedar): Second in order of the sons of
Ishmael (Gen 25:13 parallel 1 Ch 1:29). The name occurs as
typical of a distant eastern country in opposition to the
lands of the Mediterranean (Jer 2:10). The author of Second
Isa introduces this tribe in company with Nebaioth, and both
are represented as owners of flocks (Isa 60:7). Evidence of
their nomadic habits appears in Jer 49:28,29, where they are
classed among the Bene-Qedhem, and mention is made of their
flocks, camels, tents, curtains and furniture. They are
spoken of (Isa 42:11) as dwelling in chatserim ("villages"),
from which it would appear that they were a somewhat settled
tribe, corresponding to the Arabic chadariya or "town-
dwellers," as distinct from wabariya or "nomads." Ezekiel
(27:21) gives another hint of their pastoral nature where,
in his detailed picture of the wealth of Tyre, Kedar and
Arabia provide the Tyrians with lambs, rams and goats. The
fame of the tribe is further reflected in Isa 21:16,17 (the
only allusion to their might in war), and in the figurative
references to their tents (Ps 120:5; Song 1:5). In this last
passage where the tents are made symbolic of dark beauty,
the word qadhar ("to be black") may have been in the
writer's mind.
The settlements of Kedar were probably in the Northwest of
Arabia, not far from the borders of Israel. Assyrian
inscriptions have thrown light upon the history of the
tribe. There Kedar is mentioned along with the Arabs and
Nebaioth, which decides its identity with Kedar of the Old
Testament, and there is found also an account of the
conflicts between the tribe and King Assurbanipal (see
Margoliouth in HDB).
Of the Ishmaelite tribes, Kedar must have been one of the
most important, and thus in later times the name came to be
applied to all the wild tribes of the desert. It is through
Kedar (Arabic, keidar) that Muslim genealogists trace the
descent of Mohammed from Ishmael.
A. S. Fulton
Read More about Kedar in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE