Amalek, Amalekites

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AMALEK, AMALEKITES.—A tribe which roamed, from the days of the Exodus till the time of king Saul, over the region from the southern boundary of Judah to the Egyptian frontier and the peninsula of Sinai. They are not counted among the kindred of the Israelites, and probably were among the inhabitants of the region whom the Hebrew and Aramæan immigrants found already in the land. With this agrees the statement of a poem quoted in Num_24:20 ‘Amalek was the first of the nations.’
Israel first met with the Amalekites in the region near Sinai, when Amalek naturally tried to prevent the entrance of a new tribe into the region (cf. Exo_17:8-16). The battle which ensued produced such a profound impression, that one of the few things which the Pentateuch claims that Moses wrote is the ban of Jahweh upon Amalek (Exo_17:14). It appears from Deu_25:17-19 that Amalek made other attacks upon Israel, harassing her rear. On the southern border of Palestine the Amalekites also helped at a later time to prevent Israel’s entrance from Kadesh (Num_13:29; Num_14:25).
During the period of the Judges, Amalekites aided the Moabites in raiding Israel (Jdg_3:13), and at a later time they helped the Midianites to do the same thing (Jdg_6:3; Jdg_6:33; Jdg_7:12). This kept alive the old enmity. King Saul attempted to shatter their force, and captured their king, whom Samuel afterwards slew (1Sa_15:1-35). Although Saul is said to have taken much spoil, the Amalekites were still there for David to raid during that part of Saul’s reign when David was an outlaw (1Sa_27:8). The boundaries of the habitat of the Amalekites at this time are said to have been from Telem, one of the southern cities of Judah (Jos_15:24), to Shur on the way to Egypt (1Sa_15:4). Most modern critics also read Telem for Havilah in 1Sa_15:7, and for ‘of old’ in 1Sa_27:8.
It was formerly supposed, on the basis of Jdg_5:14; Jdg_12:15, that there was at one time a settlement of Amalekites farther north, in the hill country of Ephraim. That is, however, improbable, for in both passages the text seems to be corrupt. In Jdg_5:14 ‘Amalek’ is corrupted from the Hebrew for ‘valley,’ and in Jdg_12:15 from the proper name ‘Shalim.’ Individual Amalekites, nevertheless, sojourned in Israel (2Sa_1:8; 2Sa_1:13).
In 1Ch_4:42 ff. there is a remarkable statement that a remnant of the Amalekites had escaped and dwelt in Edom, and that 500 Simeonites attacked and smote them. Perhaps this accounts for the priestly genealogies which make Amalek a descendant of Esau and a subordinate Edomite. tribe (cf. Gen_36:12; Gen_36:16 and 1Ch_1:36). Perhaps here we learn how the powerful Amalek of the earlier time faded away. Psa_83:7—a late composition—refers to the Amalekites as still aiding Israel’s enemies; but this is probably a poetical imitation of ancient conditions.
On their close kindred, the Kenites, see Kenites.
George A. Barton.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909





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