Mouse in Easton's Bible Dictionary
Heb. 'akhbar, "swift digger"), properly the dormouse, the
field-mouse (1 Sam. 6:4). In Lev. 11:29, Isa. 66:17
this word is
used generically, and includes the jerboa (Mus
jaculus), rat,
hamster (Cricetus), which, though declared to be
unclean
animals, were eaten by the Arabs, and are still
eaten by the
Bedouins. It is said that no fewer than twenty-three
species of
this group ('akhbar=Arab. ferah) of animals inhabit
Israel.
God "laid waste" the people of Ashdod by the
terrible visitation
of field-mice, which are like locusts in their
destructive
effects (1 Sam. 6:4, 11, 18). Herodotus, the Greek
historian,
accounts for the destruction of the army of
Sennacherib (2 Kings
19:35) by saying that in the night thousands of mice
invaded the
camp and gnawed through the bow-strings, quivers,
and shields,
and thus left the Assyrians helpless. (See
SENNACHERIB
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