Sheep in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
shep:
1. Names:
The usual Hebrew word is tso'n, which is often translated
"flock," e.g. "Abel .... brought of the firstlings of his
flock" (Gen 4:4); "butter of the herd, and milk of the
flock" (Dt 32:14). The King James Version and the English
Revised Version have "milk of sheep." Compare Arabic da'n.
The Greek word is probaton. For other names, see notes under
CATTLE; EWE; LAMB; RAM.
2. Zoology:
The origin of domestic sheep is unknown. There are 11 wild
species, the majority of which are found in Asia, and it is
conceivable that they may have spread from the highlands of
Central Asia to the other portions of their habitat. In
North America is found the "bighorn," which is very closely
related to a Kamschatkan species. One species, the urial or
sha, is found in India. The Barbary sheep, Ovis tragelaphus,
also known as the aoudad or arui, inhabits the Atlas
Mountains of Northwest Africa. It is thought by Tristram to
be zemer, English Versions of the Bible "chamois" of Dt
14:5, but there is no good evidence that this animal ranges
eastward into Bible lands. Geographically nearest is the
Armenian wild sheep, Ovis gmelini, of Asia Minor and Persia.
The Cyprian wild sheep may be only a variety of the last,
and the mouflon of Corsica and Sardinia is an allied
species. It is not easy to draw the line between wild sheep
and wild goats. Among the more obvious distinctions are the
chin beard and strong odor of male goats. The pelage of all
wild sheep consists of hair, not wool, and this indeed is
true of some domestic sheep as the fat-rumped short-tailed
sheep of Abyssinia and Central Asia. The young lambs of this
breed have short curly wool which is the astrachan of
commerce. Sheep are geologically recent, their bones and
teeth not being found in earlier deposits than the pleiocene
or pleistocene. They were, however, among the first of
domesticated animals...
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