Jerahmeel
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Jerahmeel, (Heb. Mercy, or beloved, of God ), in the Bible, was the patriarch and clan which with Caleb, the Kenites and others, occupied the southern steppes of Palestine, probably in the district around Arad, about 17 m. S. of Hebron. It was on friendly terms with David during his residence at Ziklag (1 Sam. xxx. 29), and it was apparently in his reign that the various elements of the south were united and were reckoned to Israel. This is expressed in the Chroniclers' genealogies which make Jerahmeel and Caleb descendants of Judah.
On the names in I Chron. ii. see S. A. Cook, Ency. Bib., col. 2363 seq. Peleth (t 33) may be the origin of tile Pelethites (2 Sam. viii. 18; xv, 18; xx. 7), and since the name occurs in the revolt of Korah (Num. xvi 1), it is possible that Jerahmeel, like Caleb and the Kenites, had moved northwards from Kadesh. Samuel (q.v.) was of Jerahmeel (I Sam. i. I; Septuagint), and the consecutive Jerahmeelite names Nathan and Zabad (i Chron. ii. 36) have been associated with the prophet and officer (Zabud, I Kings iv; 5) of the times of David and Solomon respectively. The association of Samuel and Nathan with this clan, if correct, is a further illustration of the importance of the south for the growth of biblical history. The Chronicles of Jerahmeel (Moses Gaster, Oriental Translation Fund, 1899) is a late production containing a number of apocryphal Jewish legends of no historical value.
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- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.