Porcupine

VIEW:28 DATA:01-04-2020
PORCUPINE.—See Bittern.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909


por?ku-pin (קפּד, ḳippōdh (Isa_14:23; Isa_34:11; Zep_2:14) the King James Version ?bittern,? the Revised Version (British and American) ?porcupine?; Septuagint ἐχῖνος, echı́nos ?hedgehog?; קפּוז, ḳippōz (Isa_34:15), the King James Version ?great owl,? the English Revised Version ?arrow-snake,? the American Standard Revised Version ?dart-snake?; Septuagint echinos; compare Arabic ḳunfud, or ḳunfudh, ?hedgehog? or ?porcupine.? קפּד, ḳippōdh, is referred to the root קפד, ḳāphādh, ?to draw one's self together? or ?to roll oneself up,? while קפּוז, ḳipoz is referred to the root קפז, ḳāphaz, and the root קפץ, ḳāphac, ?to draw together in order to spring.? The resemblance between all these words, including the Arabic is obvious, and it is to be noted that the Septuagint has echinos in all the places cited):
The Greek echinos is the hedgehog. The Arabic ḳunfudh is used in some localities for the hedgehog and in others for the porcupine, which is also called nı̂s. The hedgehog is also called kibbâbat-ush-shauk, or ?ball of spines.? These two animals are both found in Syria and Palestine, and, while both have spines, they are very different animals, though often confounded. The hedgehog, Erinaceus europeus, is one of the Insectivora. It eats not only insects but also snakes and other small animals, as well as fruits and roots. It is about 10 inches long, covered with short spines, and rolls itself into a ball when attacked. It inhabits the countries bordering the Mediterranean. The porcupine, Hystrix cristata, is a rodent, about 26 inches long, having long spines. It is herbivorous. It backs rapidly at its foes, thrusting its sharp spines into their flesh, not shooting its spines, as is often stated. It inhabits most of Europe and Asia. It is very different from the Canadian porcupine, Erethizon dorsatus, as well as from the tree porcupines of Mexico and Central and South America.
As to the rendering ?bittern? for ḳippōdh (Isa_14:23; Isa_34:15; Zep_2:14), while the etymology favors ?hedgehog,? the context favors a bird, especially in Isa_34:11, though it cannot be said that in any of the passages the context makes ?hedgehog? an impossible rendering.
In Isa_34:15, for ḳippōz, most modern authorities (compare the Revised Version (British and American)) have some sort of serpent, referring to the Arabic root ḳafaz, ?to spring.? (See notes above on ḳāphaz and ḳāphac.) In this passage also the context is not unfavorable to a bird (compare the King James Version ?great owl?). See BITTERN; OWL; SERPENT.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.


Porcupine
SEE BITTERN.

CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.





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