Asnapper

VIEW:50 DATA:01-04-2020
unhappiness; increase of danger
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary


ASNAPPER.—See Osnappar.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909


"The great and noble" (Ezr_4:10). He planted the Cuthaeans, etc., in Samaria, after the deportation of the Israelites. He is either Esarhaddon, as Ezr_4:2 implies, or some able general under him who effected the plantation = Asardanaper = Esarhaddon.
Fausset's Bible Dictionary
By Andrew Robert Fausset, co-Author of Jamieson, Fausset and Brown's 1888.


Asnap'per. (swift). Mentioned in Ezr_4:10 as the person who settled the Cutheans in the cities of Samaria. He was probably a general of Esarhaddon. (B.C. 712).
Smith's Bible Dictionary
By Dr. William Smith.Published in 1863


the king of Assyria, who sent the Cutheans into the country belonging to the ten tribes, Ezr_4:10. Many take this prince to be Shalmaneser; but others, with more probability, think him to be Esar- haddon.
Biblical and Theological Dictionary by Richard Watson
PRINTER 1849.


as-nap?ẽr. See OSNAPPAR.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.


Asnap?per, the name of the king, or possibly Assyrian satrap, who sent the Cuthean colonies into Palestine (Ezr_4:10). Taking him for king of Assyria, he is generally identified with Esarhaddon, although some believe the name to denote Salmanezer. The title ('most noble') which is given to him belonged to the satraps.
The Popular Cyclopedia of Biblical Literature
by John Kitto.


Asnapper
(Chald. Osnappar', אָסְנִפִּר; some MISS. א סְנִפִּר, Asenappar', whence Sept. Α᾿σσεναφάρ v. r. Ναφάρ; Vulg. Asenaphar), the name of an Assyrian king or satrap who is said to have planted colonies (probably from some distant conquered territory) in Samaria, or perhaps other parts of Palestine and Syria (Ezr_4:10). On the supposition that a king of Assyria is meant, and by comparison with 2Ki_17:24, many (with Grotius) identify him with Shalmaneser; others (as Rosenmuller, Alterth. I, ii, 109; Hengstenberg, Authent. Dan. p. 178) understand Esarhaddon (comp. Ezr_4:2; so Michaelis; but' see on the contrary Herzfeld, Gesch. d. Volkes Israel, i, 473); while most of the Jewish interpreters assume Sennacherib to be meant. He was probably, however, only a satrap of some of the Assyrian provinces (B.C. cir. 712), and the epithet applied to him in the passage in Ezra רִבָּא וְיִקִּירָא, the great and the excellent, i.e. most eminent [comp. κράτιστος, Luk_1:3]; Auth. Vers. "the great and noble") is apparently the usual title of persons in that capacity, being indeed perhaps the translation of the official title Osnapper itself (אָסְ=Sanscrit osna, great; פִּר= Sanscrit para, noble; see Luzath, Le Sanscritisme de la lngue Assyrienne, p. 38-40). Bohlen, on the other hand, compares Sanscrit Senapa, leader of an army ; according to which the name would become merely a designation of an Assyrian general.



CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.





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