Ass

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ASS (hamôr; ‘she-ass,’ ’âthon [Gr. onos of both sexes]; ‘young ass’ or ‘colt,’ ‘ayir [Gr. pôlos]; ‘wild ass,’ pere’ and ‘ârôdh).—The ass (Arab. [Note: Arabic.] hamar) is the most universally useful domesticated animal in Palestine. On it the fellah rides to his day’s work, with it he ploughs his fields, threshes out his corn, and at last carries home the harvest (Neh_13:15). Whole groups of donkeys traverse every road carrying corn (Gen_42:26-27), fire-wood (Gen_22:3), provisions (1Sa_16:20), skins of water or baskets full of sand, stone or refuse. A group of such animals are so accustomed to keep together that they would do so even if running away (1Sa_9:3; 1Sa_9:20). The little ass carrying the barley, which leads every train of camels, is a characteristic sight. Whenever the traveller journeys through the land, the braying of the ass is as familiar a sound as the barking of the village dog. The man of moderate means when journeying rides an ass, often astride his bedding and clothes, as doubtless was done by many a Scripture character (Num_22:21-38, Jos_15:18, 1Sa_25:20-28, 2Sa_17:23; 2Sa_19:26 etc.). A well-trained ass will get over the ground rapidly at a pace more comfortable than that of an ordinary horse; it is also very sure-footed. The man of position in the town, the sheikh of the mosque, lawyer or medical man—indeed, any peaceful citizen—is considered suitably mounted on donkey-back, especially if the animal is white (Jdg_5:10). A well-bred white ass fetches a higher price than a fairly good horse. A she-ass (Arab. [Note: Arabic.] ’atar) is preferred (Num_22:21-33, 1Sa_9:3, 2Ki_4:22-24, 1Ch_27:30), because quieter and more easily left tied up; a strong mals is almost uncontrollable at times, and gives vent to the most dismal brays as he catches sight of female asses. The castrated animal is not often seen, because frequently wanting in ‘go’ and very timid. She-asses are also, when of valuable breed, prized for breeding purposes. The common ass is brown, sometimes almost black or grey. Skeletons of asses are not uncommon by the high-road sides, and the jawbone might be a not unhandy weapon in an emergency (Jdg_15:16, where the play on the word ‘ass’ [hamôr] and ‘heap’ [hamôr] should be noticed). Although the ass was forbidden food to the Jews, we read (2Ki_6:25) that ‘an ass’s head was sold for fourscore pieces of silver’ in the extremity of famine in besieged Samaria. In ploughing, the modern fellahin actually seem to prefer to yoke together an ox and an ass, or a camel and an ass (contrast Deu_22:10). The idea of the stupidity of the ass is the same in the East as in the West.
The young ass (Isa_30:5; Isa_30:24) or colt (Job_11:12, Zec_9:9, Luk_19:33 etc.), the Arab. [Note: Arabic.] jahsh, is referred to several times. Little colts of very tender age trot beside their mothers, and soon have small burdens put on them. They should not be regularly ridden for three years. The young asses in the Bible are all apparently old enough for riding or burden-bearing.
Wild asses are not to-day found in Palestine, though, it is said, plentiful in the deserts to the East (Job_24:5), where they roam in herds and run with extraordinary fleetness (Job_39:5). Ishmael is compared in his wildness and freedom to a wild ass (Gen_16:12), while Issachar is a wild ass subdued (Gen_49:14; Gen_49:16).
E. W. G. Masterman.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909


Hebrew athon; from athan, 'short in step".
1. The domestic she ass, named so from its slowness.
2. The chamor, the he ass, whether domesticated or not, distinguished from the athon; Gen_45:23. From chamar, "red," as the Spaniards call the donkey "burro," from its red color. Used in riding and plowing. Not held in contempt for stupidity, as with us. Issachar is compared to an "ass, strong boned, crouching down between the hurdles (Gen_49:14): he saw that rest was a good and the land pleasant; so he bowed his shoulder to bear, and became servant unto tribute;" ease at the cost of liberty would be his characteristic. Robust, and with a prime agricultural inheritance, his people would strive after material good, rather than political rule. The prohibition of horses rendered the donkey the more esteemed in Israel. In the E. it is a far superior animal to ours.
The bearing of the Arab donkey is erect, the limbs well formed and muscular, and the gait graceful. It is spirited, and withal docile. The upper classes, judges, (as Jair's 30 sons, and Abdon's 40 sons and 30 nephews,) and kings, (as David and Solomon,) rode upon donkeys or mules (Jdg_5:10; Jdg_10:4; Jdg_12:14; 1Ki_1:33). The white ass, combining symmetry with color, is especially esteemed. The ass, by its long hollow sharp-edged hoofs, is more sure footed than the flat hoofed horse; it suffers little from thirst, and is satisfied with prickly herbs, scarcely sweats at all, and so is best suited for the arid hilly regions of western Asia. It is lowly as compared with the horse; it symbolizes peace, as the horse does war, and as such bore the meek and lowly yet divinely royal Savior, the Prince of peace, in His triumphal entrance into His own capital (Zec_9:9); the young untamed colt bearing Him quietly marks His universal dominion over nature as well as spirit.
It was not to be yoked with the ox (Deu_22:10); for the distinctions which God has fixed in nature are to be observed; humanity would forbid animals of such different size and strength being yoked together. Spiritually see 2Co_6:14; Lev_19:19. As it did not chew the end (Lev_11:26), it was unclean; hence is marked the extremity of the famine in Samaria (2Ki_6:25), when "an ass' head (an unclean beast from which they would ordinarily shrink) was sold for fourscore pieces of silver." "Balsam was rebuked for his iniquity, the voiceless beast of burden (ass) speaking with man's voice forbade the madness of the prophet" (2Pe_2:16). It turned aside at the sight of the angel; but he, after God's express prohibition, wished to go for gain, a dumb beast forbidding an inspired prophet! The brute's instinctive obedience rebukes the gifted seer's self willed disobedience. Hosea (Hos_8:9) compares Israel to a wild ass: "they are gone up to Assyria, (whereas he ought to dwell) a wild donkey alone by himself" (Num_23:9).
The stubborn wild donkey is wiser than Ephraim, for it avoids intercourse with others through love of freedom, whereas Ephraim courts alliances fatal to his freedom. (Maurer.) In Jer_2:24 headstrong, undisciplinable obstinacy, and untamable perversity, and lust after the male, answering to Israel's spiritual lust after idols and alliances with pagan, are the point (Hos_2:6-7): "all they (the males) that seek her will not (have no need to) weary themselves in searching for her, in her month (the season when sexual impulse is strongest), they shall find her" putting herself in their way, and not needing to be sought cut by the males.
3. The arod, the khur of Persia; light red, gray beneath, without stripe or cross; or the wild mule of Mongolia, superior to the wild donkey in beauty, strength and swiftness, called so either from the sound of the word resembling neighing, or from the Arabic arad, "flee."
4. 'Air, from 'ir, to be fervent, lustful; so the chamor, perhaps from chamar, "fervent in lust" (Eze_23:20). "Young asses; ... donkey colts" (Isa_30:6; Isa_30:24).
5. Pere, the wild donkey of Asia; the ghoorkhur, mouse brown, with a broad dorsal stripe, but no cross on the shoulders, the Latin onager (Gen_16:12): Ishmael "shall be a wild donkey man;" from paro, "to run swiftly "; compare Job_39:5; "who hath sent out the wild donkey (pereh) free? or who hath loosed the bands of the wild donkey (arod)?" Doubtless some of the most useful animals to man were created to be, from man's first being, his domestic attendants. Possibly some of the wild species have sprung from those originally tame. The wild asses' characteristics noticed in holy writ are their love of unrestrained freedom, self will in pursuit of lust (Jer_2:24), fondness for solitary places (Hos_8:9), standing on high places when athirst (Jer_14:6; when even the pere, usually so inured to want of water, suffers, the drought must be terrible indeed).
Fausset's Bible Dictionary
By Andrew Robert Fausset, co-Author of Jamieson, Fausset and Brown's 1888.


Ass. Five Hebrew names of the genus Asinus occur in the Old Testament.
1. Chamor denotes the male domestic ass.
2. Athon, the common domestic she-ass.
3. Air, the name of a wild ass, which occurs Gen_32:15; Gen_49:11.
4. Pere, a species of wild ass mentioned Gen_12:16.
5. Arod occurs only in Job_39:5, but in what respect it differs from the Pere is uncertain.
The ass in eastern countries is a very different animal from what he is in western Europe. The most noble and honorable amongst the Jews were wont to be mounted on asses. (With us, the ass is a symbol of stubbornness and stupidity, while in the East it is especially remarkable for its patience, gentleness, intelligence, meek submission and great power of endurance." ? L. Abbott.
(The color is usually a reddish brown, but there are white asses, which are much prized. The ass was the animal of peace as the horse was the animal of war; hence the appropriateness of Christ in his triumphal entry riding on an ass. The wild ass is a beautiful animal. ? Editor).
Mr. Lavard remarks that in fleetness the wild ass (Asinus hemippus) equals the gazelle and to overtake it is a feat which only one or two of the most celebrated mares have been known to accomplish.
Smith's Bible Dictionary
By Dr. William Smith.Published in 1863


חמור , Arabic, chamara and hamar. There are three words referred by translators to the ass:
1. חמור , which is the usual appellation, and denotes the ordinary kind;
such as is employed in labour, carriage, and domestic services.
2. פרא , rendered onager, or “wild ass.”
3. אתון , rendered she ass. To these we must add רדיא , rendered wild asses, Dan_5:21. The prevailing colour of this animal in the east
is reddish; and the Arabia word, chamara. signifies to be red. In his natural state he is fleet, fierce, formidable, and intractable; but when domesticated, the most gentle of all animals, and assumes a patience and submission even more humble than his situation. Le Clerc observes, that the Israelites not being allowed to keep horses, the ass was not only made a beast of burden, but used on journeys; and that even the most honourable of the nation were wont to be mounted on asses, which in the eastern countries were much larger and more beautiful than they are with us. Jair of Gilead had thirty sons who rode on as many asses, and commanded in thirty cities, Jdg_10:4. Abdon's sons and grandsons rode also upon asses, Jdg_12:4. And Christ makes his solemn entry into Jerusalem riding upon an ass, Mat_21:4; Joh_12:14. To draw with an ox and ass together was prohibited in the Mosaic law, Deu_22:10. This law is thought to have respect to some idolatrous custom of the Gentiles, who were taught to believe that their fields would be more fruitful if thus ploughed; for it is not likely that men would have yoked together two creatures so different in their tempers and motions, had they not been led to it by some superstition. There might be, however, a physical reason for this injunction. Two beasts of a different species cannot well associate together; and on this account never pull pleasantly either in the cart or plough, and are not therefore “true yoke fellows.” Le Clerc considers this law as merely symbolical, importing that we are not to form improper alliances in civil and religious life; and he thinks his opinion confirmed by these words of St. Paul,
2Co_6:14 : “Be ye not unequally yoked with unbelievers;” which are simply to be understood as prohibiting all intercourse between Christians and idolaters, in social, matrimonial, and religious life. To teach the Jews the propriety of this, a variety of precepts relative to improper and heterogeneous mixtures were interspersed through their law; so that in civil and domestic life they might have them ever before their eyes.
The wild ass, called PARA, is probably the onager of the ancients. It is taller and a much more dignified animal than the common or domestic ass; its legs are more elegantly shaped; and it bears its head higher. It is peculiarly distinguished by a dusky woolly mane, long erect ears, and a forehead highly arched. The colour of the hair, in general, is of a silvery white. These animals associate in herds, under a leader, and are very shy. They inhabit the mountainous regions and desert parts of Tartary, Persia, &c. Anciently, they were likewise found, in Lycaonia, Phrygia, Mesopotamia, and Arabia Deserta. They are remarkably wild; and Job_39:5-8, describes the liberty they enjoy, the place of their retreat, their manners, and wild, impetuous, and untamable spirit. “Vain man would be wise, though he be born a wild ass's colt,” Job_11:12; עיר פדא , “ass colt,” not “ass's colt;” יר being in apposition with פדא , and not in government. The whole is a proverbial expression, denoting extreme perversity and ferocity, and repeatedly alluded to in the Old Testament. Thus, Gen_16:12, it is prophesied of Ishmael that he should be פדא ארם , a wild ass man; rough, untaught, and libertine as a wild ass. So Hos_13:15; “He (Ephraim) hath run wild (literally assified himself) amidst the braying monsters.” So again, Hos_8:9, the very same character is given of Ephraim, who is called “a solitary wild ass by himself,” or perhaps a solitary wild ass of the desert; for the original will bear to be so rendered. This proverbial expression has descended among the Arabians to the present day, who still employ, as Schultens has remarked, the expressions, “the ass of the desert,” or “the wild ass,” to describe an obstinate, indocile, and contumacious person. The Prophet Isaiah, Isa_32:14, describes great desolation by saying that “the wild asses shall rejoice where a city stood.” There is another kind of ass called, אתון . Abraham had ATONOTH, Gen_12:16; Balaam rode on an ATON, Num_22:23. We find from 1Ch_27:30, that David had an officer expressly appointed to superintend his ATONOTH; not his ordinary asses, but those of a nobler race; which implies at least equal dignity in this officer to his colleagues mentioned with him. This notion of the ATON gives also a spirit to the history of Saul, who, when his father's ATONOTH were lost, was at no little pains to seek them; moreover, as beside being valuable, they were uncommon, he might the more readily hear of them if they had been noticed or taken up by any one; and this leads to the true interpretation of the servant's proposed application to Samuel, 1Ch_27:6, as though he said, “In his office of magistracy this honourable man may have heard of these strayed rarities, and secured them; peradventure he can direct us.”
Thus we find that these atonoth are mentioned in Scripture, only in the possession of judges, patriarchs, and other great men; insomuch that where these are there is dignity, either expressed or implied. They were also a present for a prince; for Jacob presented Esau with twenty, Gen_32:15. What then shall we say of the wealth of Job, who possessed a thousand? Another word which is rendered “wild ass” by our translators, Job_39:5, is ORUD; which seems to be the same, that in the Chaldee of Daniel, 5:21, is called oredia. Mr. Parkhurst supposes that this word denotes the brayer, and that PARA and ORUD are only two names for the same animal. But these names may perhaps refer to different races, though of the same species: so that a description of the properties of one may apply to both, though not without some variation.
Who sent out the para free?
Or who hath loosed the bands of the orud? Whose dwelling I have made the wilderness, And the barren land (salt deserts) his resort: The range of open mountains are his pasture, And he searcheth after every green thing.
Gmelin observes that the onager is very fond of salt. Whether the “deserts” of the above text were salt marshes, or salt deserts, is of very little consequence; the circumstance shows the correctness of the Hebrew poet. In Daniel we read that Nebuchadnezzar dwelt with the OREDIA. We need not suppose that he was banished to the deserts, but was at most kept safely in an enclosure of his own park, where curious animals were kept for state and pleasure. If this be correct, then the ORUD was somewhat, at least, of a rarity at Babylon; and it might be of a kind different from the PARA, as it is denoted by another name. May it not be the Gicquetei of Professor Pallas, the wild mule of Mongalia? which surpasses the onager in size, beauty, and perhaps in swiftness.
Biblical and Theological Dictionary by Richard Watson
PRINTER 1849.


as (חמור, ḥămōwr or חמר, ḥămōr, compare Arabic ḥamār, apparently connected with Arabic root 'aḥmar, ?red,? but referred by some to root hamal, ?to carry?; also, but less commonly, both in Hebrew and in Arabic, א תון, 'āthōn, Arabic 'atan, used in Arabic only of the females; פרה, pereh, or פרא, pere', and ערד, ‛ărādh, or ערוד, ‛ārōdh, Arabic ‛ard, ?wild ass,? and also עיר, ‛ayir, Arabic ‛aı̄r, ?a young? or ?wild ass?).
1. Names
The name ה, 'arodh (Job_39:5) is rare; ονος, onos (Mat_21:2).
2. Meaning
(1) Ḥămōr is derived from the root which means, in all probability, ?to carry a burden? (see F?rst, Handw?rterbuch, חמר ii), or ?heap up.? While no analogies are contained in the Old Testament this root occurs in New Hebrew. The Aramaic חמר, ḥamēr, means ?to make a ruin-heap? (from which the noun ḥămōr, ?a heap,? used in Jdg_15:16 in a play of words: ?With the jawbone of an ass, heaps upon heaps, with the jawbone of an ass have I smitten a thousand men?). The root may also mean ?to be red.? In this case the nominal form ḥămōr may have been derived from the reddish-brown skin of a certain type of the ass.
(2) 'Āthōn, Assyrian 'atânu and Aramaic אתּנא, 'atānā', is derived from אתא, 'āthā' ?to come,? ?go,? etc. (F?rst suggests that it may be derived from אתן, 'āthan, Aramaic עדן, ‛ādhan, ?to be slender,? ?docile,? etc.); אתונות צחורות, 'ăthōnōth ceḥōrōth, ?red-white asses? (Jdg_5:10) designates a better breed.
(3) ‛Ayir, Arabic ‛airu (?male ass?) used of the young and vigorous animal, is derived from the root עיר, ?to go away,? ?escape through swiftness? (Hommel, Namen der Saugethiere, 121-23). This name is used as a parallel to בּני אתונו, benı̄ 'ăthōnō (Gen_49:11) and as a compound of עיר פרא, ‛ayir pere' (Job_11:12), ?a wild ass's colt.?
(4) Pere', ?wild ass,? is derived from the root which means ?to run,? suggestive of the animal's swiftness.
(5) ‛Ārōdh, is, in all probability, an Aramaic loan-word for the Hebrew pere'̌. The Targum uses ארודא, ‛ărōdhā' and ערדא, ‛ărādhā'̌.
3. Uses
From the references to these various names in the Old Testament it is clear that (1) ḥămōr was used for riding purposes: (a) by men (2Sa_16:2, 2Sa_16:23; 2Sa_19:26; 1Ki_2:40; 1Ki_13:13, 1Ki_13:23, 1Ki_13:24, 1Ki_13:27); (b) by women (Exo_4:20; Jos_15:18; Jdg_1:14; 1Sa_25:20, 1Sa_25:23, 1Sa_25:42; compare 2Ch_28:15). צמד המורים, cemedh ḥămōrı̄m, ?a pair of asses? was used for riding as well as for burdens (Jdg_19:3, Jdg_19:10, Jdg_19:19, Jdg_19:21, etc.). (2) It was also used in tillage (Isa_32:20). In this connection the law prohibits the use of an ass in plowing with an ox (Deu_22:10). The she-ass ('āthōn) was used as a beast of burden (Gen_45:23) and for riding (Jdg_5:10; Num_22:21, Num_22:22; 2Ki_4:24). The ‛ayir is also referred to as used in riding (Jdg_10:4), carrying (Isa_30:6) and tilling (Isa_30:24).
4. As a Domestic Animal
Besides the use of the ass in agriculture and riding it was employed in the caravans of commerce, and sent even upon long expeditions through the desert. The ass is and always has been one of the most common domestic animals. It is a much more important animal in Bible lands than in England and America. The humblest peasant owned his own ass. It is associated throughout the Bible with peaceful pursuits (Gen_42:26 f; Gen_22:3; 1Sa_16:20; 2Sa_19:26; Neh_13:15), whereas the horse is referred to in connection with war and armies. Reference is also made to the use of the flesh of the ass in time of famine (2Ki_6:25). The origin of the ass like that of most domestic animals is lost in antiquity and it cannot be confidently stated from what species of wild ass it was derived. There are three races of wild asses in Asia, one of which is found in Syria, but they may all be referred to one species, Equus hemionus. The African species is E. asinus, and good authorities consider our domestic asses to have descended from this, and to have been introduced at an early period into the entire Orient. The Ṣulaib Arabs of the Syrian desert, who have no horses, have a famous breed of swift and hardy gray asses which they assert they cross at intervals with the wild asses of the desert. It is not unlikely that domestic asses like dogs are the result of crosses with more than one wild species.
As a domestic animal it preceded the horse, which was first introduced into Egypt by the Hyksos about 1800 bc. See HORSE.
5. Figurative Uses in the Old Testament
(1) חמור גרם, ḥămōrr gārem, ?an ass of strong bones,? is used metaphorically of Issachar (Gen_49:14); בּשׂר חמור, besar ḥămōr, ?the genital organ of an ass,? is used in contempt (Eze_23:20); קביּרת חמור, ḳebhūrath ḥămōr, ?the burial of an ass,? is applied to ignominious treatment of a corpse (Jer_22:19); ר, chamor is used as a symbol of peace and humility (2Sa_19:26). Zechariah speaks of the future Messiah as ?lowly, and riding upon an ass, even upon a colt the foal of an ass? (Zec_9:9; compare Mat_21:5, Mat_21:7).
(2) Pere' is used as a symbol of wildness (Hos_8:9), and פרא אדם, pere' 'ādhām, 'a wild ass of man' (Gen_16:12), referring to Ishmael, designates a free nomad. In Job the name pere' is applied to the desert dwellers (Job_24:5). Jeremiah employs this name as a symbol of lust. He compares Israel's love of idolatry to the lust of the wild ass (Jer_2:24).
6. Wider Use in Literature
The ass ('āthōn) figures prominently in the Balaam story (Nu 22; 2Pe_2:16. See Gray, ICC, ?Numbers,? at the place). It is interesting to note that Apion charged the Jews that they ?placed an ass's head in their holy place,? affirming that ?this was discovered when Antiochus Epiphanes spoiled our temple, and found that ass's head there made of gold, and worth a great deal of money.? Josephus, refuting this absurdity, states that the Roman conquerors of Judea found nothing in the temple ?but what was agreeable to the strictest piety.? He goes on to say: ?Apion ought to have had a regard to these facts.... As for us Jews, we ascribe no honor or power to asses, as do the Egyptians to crocodiles and asps.... Asses are the same with us which they are with other wise men; namely, creatures that bear the burdens that we lay upon them? (Apion, II, 7).
Literature
G. A. Smith, Jerusalem, I, 307ff; Gesenius' and F?rst's Lexicons to the Old Testament; articles in Encyclopedia Biblica and HDB.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.


Common Ass

Fig. 63?Domestic Ass of Western Asia
The common working ass of Western Asia (called in the Hebrew Chamor), is an animal of small stature, frequently represented on Egyptian monuments with panniers on the back, usually of a reddish color. It appears to be a domesticated race of the wild ass of Arabia, Mesopotamia, and Southern Persia.
In its natural state it never seeks woody, but upland pasture, mountainous and rocky retreats; and it is habituated to stand on the brink of precipices (a practice not entirely obliterated in our own domestic races), whence, with protruded ears, it surveys the scene below, blowing and at length braying in extreme excitement. This habit is beautifully depicted by Jeremiah (Jer_17:6; Jer_48:6).
The Authorized Version translates the Hebrew words Oir, Oirim, 'young ass,' 'colt;' but this rendering does not appear on all occasions to be correct, the word being sometimes used where the Oirim or Ourim carry loads and till the ground, which seems to afford evidence of, at least, full growth (Isa_30:6; Isa_30:24). The word Aton, Atunuth, is unsatisfactorily rendered 'she-ass,' unless we suppose it to refer to a breed of greater beauty and importance than the common, namely, the silver grey of Africa; which being large and indocile, the females were anciently selected in preference for riding, and on that account formed a valuable kind of property. It is now the fashion, as it was during the Parthian empire, and probably in the time of the Judges, to dapple this breed with spots of orange or crimson, or of both colors together; and although the taste may be puerile, we conceive that it is the record of remote conquest achieved by a nation of Central Asia mounted on spotted or clouded horses, and revived by the Parthians, who were similarly equipped.
As this animal was most serviceable to man, its name was held in respect rather than contempt. It is alleged, indeed, that the ass was held in contempt in Egypt; but among the Arabs and Jews we have 'the voice of one crying in the wilderness,' a solemn allusion derived from the wild ass, almost the only voice in the desert; and in the distinguishing epithet of Mirvan II, last Ommiad caliph, who was called the wild ass of Mesopotamia?proofs that no idea of contempt was associated with the prophet's metaphor, and that, by such a designation, no insult was intended to the person or dignity of the prince.
Wild Ass

Fig. 64?Wild Ass
By this term the Scripture seems to intend the horse-ass, or wild mule. The species is first noticed by Aristotle, who mentions nine of these animals as being brought to Phrygia by Pharnaces the satrap, whereof three were living in the time of his son Pharnabazus. The allusion of Jeremiah, in speaking of the wild ass (Jer_14:6), most forcibly depicts the scarcity of food when this species, inured to the desert and to want of water, are made the prominent example of suffering. They were most likely used in traces to draw chariots (Isa_21:7). The wild ass is little inferior to the wild horse; in shape it resembles a mule, in gracefulness a horse, and in color it is silvery, with broad spaces of flaxen or bright bay on the thigh, flank, shoulder, neck, and head; the ears are wide like the zebra's, and the neck is clothed with a vertical dark mane prolonged in a stripe to the tuft of the tail. The company of this animal is liked by horses, and, when domesticated, it is gentle: it is now found wild from the deserts of the Oxus and Jaxartes to China and Central India. In Cutch it is never known to drink, and in whole districts which it frequents water is not to be found. Though the natives talk of the fine flavor of the flesh, and the Gour in Persia is the food of heroes, to an European its smell is abominable.
Mule
Mule occurs in 2Sa_13:29; 1Ki_1:33; 1Ki_10:25; and in other places. This animal is sufficiently well known to require no particular description. Where, or at what period, breeding mules was first commenced is totally unknown, although, from several circumstances, Western Asia may be regarded as the locality; and the era as coinciding with that of the first kings of Israel. In the time of David, to be allowed to ride on the king's own mule was an understood concession of great, if not sovereign authority, and several years before the mention of this event all the king's sons already rode upon mules. It does not appear that the Hebrew people, at this early period at least, bred mules; they received them from Armenia; but the most beautiful were no doubt brought from the vicinity of Bassora.
The Popular Cyclopedia of Biblical Literature
by John Kitto.


Gen_49:14 (a) Here we have a type of the consecrated believer who is willing to be a burden bearer for GOD and for man. He bears the burdens of GOD's people, and carries them to GOD. He bears the burden of GOD's message, and carries it to the people. He realizes that a path of rest and peace is good for GOD's. people, and he wants to share in the work of making it possible.

This may also be a type of the Lord JESUS Himself. Certainly He is our burden bearer; he bears the burden of our relationship to GOD, and also our relationship to other people. He too sees that rest is good, and calls on us to cast every burden upon Him, so that we may be free ourselves to carry the burdens of others. Certainly this is a wonderful picture of the ministry of CHRIST JESUS, our Lord. (See Mat_11:28).

Exo_13:13 (c) The ass in this passage is typical of the sinner who must be redeemed by the death of the Lamb of GOD, or else be himself lost under the judgment of GOD.

Job_11:12 (a) The ass represents the unsaved parent who gives birth to on unsaved child (the colt). The thought of being "wild" is that the natural man wants no restraint nor does he want to be hindered in his movements. We see this plainly in the little child who wants to do as he pleases on his earliest days. It is carried out through life unless the restraining power of GOD is brought to bear upon him.

Isa_1:3 (b) This ass is a type of the unsaved person and of any who are not interested in GOD but only want His blessings and His gifts. The ox in the passage is a type of the believer who loves the Lord and cares more for the giver than for the gift.

Zec_9:9 (c) This ass, as the one in Joh_12:14, represents the believer, who being set free from his old bondage carries the Lord JESUS about wherever he goes so that others may see and know Him.

(taken from "Number in Scripture")

"The 'ass' is the only animal that man is compared to: see Job_11:12, "For vain man would be wise, though man be born a wild ass's colt."

In Exo_13:13, the first-born of man is classed with the firstling of an ass. Both must be redeemed with a lamb. This is repeated in Exo_34:20. Nothing less than a sacrificial redemptive act could bring such a being to GOD.

There are 28 (4 x 7) asses separately spoken of, and with these may be compared the 28 (4 x 7) 'times' connected with 'vain man' in Ecc_3:1-8.

1. Balaam's ass (Num_22:21), "a time to speak."
2. Achsah's ass (Jos_15:18), "a time to get," when she lighted off her ass to make her request and get what she asked.
3. Samson's (Jdg_15:15), "a time to war."
4. The Levite's (Jdg_19:28), "a time to be silent," when "none answered," and he sent his desperate, silent message throughout Israel.
5. Abigail's (1Sa_25:20), "a time of peace," when she met David and made peace for Nahal.
6. Her second ass (1Sa_25:42), "a time to love," when she went to meet David and became his wife.
7. Ahithophel's (2Sa_17:23), "a time to die," when he saddled his ass and went and hanged himself.
8. The "old prophet's" ass (1Ki_13:23-24), "a time to kill," when he found "the man of God" killed by the lion.
9. The "man of God's" ass (1Ki_13:29), "a time to mourn," when the old prophet laid him thereon "to mourn and to bury him."
10. The Shunamite's ass (2Ki_4:24-37), "a time to heal," when she rode to Elisha, who restored her son.
11. Mephibosheth's (2Sa_19:26), "a time to embrace," when he would go and salute David.
12. Shimei's (1Ki_2:40-46), "a time to die."
13. Jesse's (1Sa_16:20), "a time to live" (21).
14. Moses' (Exo_4:20-26), "a time to kill," when he incurred the judgment of Gen_17:14, and fulfilled the truth.
15. Abraham's (Gen_22:3), "a time to get and a time to lose," when GOD demanded back the son He had given.
16. The Saviour's ass (Mat_21:5, Mat_21:9), "a time to laugh," when the daughter of Jerusalem rejoiced.
17. The young, its foal (Mat_21:5).
18-28. The asses of Jacob's sons (Gen_44:13), filling up the other "times."
Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types
press 1957.


Ass
(properly חֲמוֹר, chamor', from the reddish dun color of the hair of the wild ass; female אָתוֹן, athon'; Gr. ὄνος),
(I.) a domestic animal (Gen_12:16; Gen_24:35; Gen_30:43; Gen_32:5; Jos_6:21; Jos_7:24; comp. Exo_20:17; Exo_22:4; Exo_23:4 sq.; 1Sa_8:16; Luk_13:15; Luk_14:5), found generally in the East (comp. 1Ch_27:30; for Mosaic precepts respecting the animal, see Exo_20:17; Exo_21:33; Exo_22:10; Exo_23:4 sq.; Deu_22:3 sq.; comp. Mishna, Baba Mtez. 6:3; Baba Bathra, v, 2), and very serviceable (particularly in the cultivation of the soil, Varro, R. R. ii, 6; Pallad. 18:14), although not to be compared with the modern ass of northern countries, but by far more stately (Olear. Trav. p. 301, estimates a Persian ass to be worth nearly $100; comp. Plin. 8:68; see Hasselquist, Tray. p. 67), more active, more mettlesome, and quicker (according to Niebuhr, Reisen, i, 311, an ass of ordinary speed will go over 1750 double paces of a man in half an hour: comp. Abdallatif, Denkw. p. 1375; Sonini, ii, 89 sq.). Asses were therefore (as still) held in great estimation; so that while with us the word ass is a low term of contempt, with the Orientals anciently as now the very opposite was the case (Gen_49:14; comp. Iliad, 11:588 sq.; see D'Herbelot, Biblioth. Or. s.v. Hamar; Freytag, Ad select. ex histor. Halebi, p. 59; Gessner, in the Commentar. Soc. Gott. ii, 32 sq.; Jablonski, Panth. DEg. iii, 45; Michaelis, in the Commentar. Soc. Gott. 4:6 sq.).
The ass (perhaps the young ass, Job_1:3; Num_22:21; 2Ki_4:24; Mat_21:2 sq.) was, on account of his sure step over hilly tracts, the usual animal for riding (Exo_4:20; Num_22:21; Jdg_10:4; Jdg_12:14; 1Ki_2:40; 1Ki_13:27; 2Sa_19:26), even for ladies (Jos_15:18; Jdg_1:14; 1Sa_25:23; 2Ki_4:22; 2Ki_4:24; comp. Fabric. Cod. Apogr. i, 104; see Niebuhr, Beschr. p. 44; Schwei- ger,'Reisen, p. 272; Rosenmuller, Morgenl. iii, 222) and nobles (2Sa_17:23; 1Ki_13:13; 1Ki_13:23; Zec_9:9; comp. Mat_21:2 sq. [see Lightfoot, Hor. Heb. in loc. p. 408; Schottgen, i, 169 sq.]; Mar_11:1 sq.; Luk_19:29 sq.; Joh_12:14 sq.; see Russel, Aleppo, ii, 49; Pococke, East, i, 309). The last preferred dappled asses, i.e. such as had a brownish-red skin marked with white streaks (Jdg_5:10; comp. Morier, Trav. p. 136; Paulus, Samil. i, 244). No saddle, however, was used from the earliest time (Hasselquist, Trav. p. 66), but simply a covering consisting of a piece of cloth or a cushion (hence חֲמֹר חָבוּשׁ, a bound or girt ass, means a beast saddled and bridled, Gen_21:3; Num_22:21; Jdg_19:10), so that the driver (Jdg_19:3; 2Ki_4:24; Talm. חִמָּר, chammar', Mishna, Erub. 4:10, etc.) ran beside or behind the rider (Hasselquist, Trav. p. 66).
The ass, moreover, was not only employed for bearing burdens (Neh_13:15; Jos_9:4; 1Sa_16:20; 1Sa_25:18), but even for distant journeys (Gen_43:26; Gen_44:3; Gen_44:13; Gen_45:23; comp. Josephus, Life, 24; Mishna. Parah, 12:9), and also for drawing the plough (Deu_22:10; comp. Exo_23:12; Isa_30:24; Isa_32:20; so, too, among the Romans, Plin. 8:68; 17:3; Varro, R. R. ii, 6; Colum. 7:1) and in mills (Mat_18:6; Luk_17:2; "asinus molarius," Colum. 7:2; חמור הריחיים, Buxtorf, Floril. Hebr. p. 308; comp. Brouckhus, ad Tibull. ii, 1, 8). In war they carried the baggage (2Ki_7:7; comp. Polluc. Onom. i, 10); but, according to Isa_21:7, the Persian king Cyrus had cavalry mounted on asses; and not only Strabo (xv, 726) assures us that the Caramanians, a people forming part of the Persian empire, rode on asses ina battle, but Herodotus (iv, 129) expressly states that Darius Hystaspis made use of the ass in a fight with the Scythians (comp. Allian, Anim. 12:32). See, generally, Bochart, Hieroz. i, 148 sq.; ii, 214 sq.; Lengerke, Kenaan, i, 140 sq., 146, 165.-Winer,i, 346.
The domestic ass, being an animal of a patient, laborious, and stupid nature, the emblem of persons of a similar disposition. Issachar is called a strong ass (Gen_49:14), in reference to his descendants, as being a settled agricultural tribe, who cultivated their own territory with patient labor, emblematized by the ass. We rarely read of Issachar being engaged in any war, which is ever hostile to agriculture. Of Jehoiakim it is said, in Jer_22:19, " With the burial of an ass shall he be buried, dragged along, and cast forth beyond the gates of Jerusalem;" an event mentioned by Josephus, who says that "the king of Babylon advanced with an army, that Jehoiakim admitted him readily into Jerusalem, and that Nebuchadnezzar, having entered the city, instantly put him to death, and cast his dead body unburied without the walls." It is recorded of Christ in Zec_9:9, and quoted thence in Mat_21:5, that he should be "humble, and sitting on an ass, even on a colt the foal of an ass." As horses were used in war, Christ may be supposed, by this action, to have shown the humble and peaceable nature of his kingdom. On the contrary, Ephraim is compared to a wild ass, in Hos_8:9, i.e. he was untamed to the yoke, and traversed the desert as earnestly in the pursuit of idols as the onager in quest of his mates.
In the gospels is mentioned the , μύλος ἰνικός (Mat_18:6; Mar_9:41), to express a large mill-stone, turned by asses, heavier than that turned by women or by slaves. See Jahn's Archceol. § 118, 189.
(II.) The ass is the Equus Asinus of Linnaeus; Some formed into a sub- genus, containing that group of the Equidae which are not striped like zebras, and have forms and characters distinguishable from true horses, such as a peculiar shape of body and limbs, long ears, an upright mane, a tail only tufted at the end, a streak along the spine, often crossed with another on the shoulders, a braying voice, etc. To designate these animals the Hebrews used various terms, by which, no doubt, though not with the strict precision of science, different species and distinct races of the group, as well as qualities of sex and age, were indicated; but the contexts in general afford only slight assistance in discriminating them; and reliance on cognate languages is often unavailing, since we find that similar words frequently point to secondary and not to identical acceptations. The name is assigned by the' Auth. Vers. to several distinct Heb. words, viz. אָתוֹן, חֲמוֹר, עִיִר, עָרוֹד, and פֶּרֶא, and the Greek words. It occurs also in two passages of Sir_13:19; Sir_33:24, in the first of which it stands for ovaypog. SEE HE-ASS; SEE SHE-ASS; SEE FOAL.
1. The ordinary term חֲמוֹר(chamor', ὄνος) we take to be the name of the common working ass of Western Asia, an animal of small stature, frequenly represented on Egyptian monuments with panniers on the back, usually of a reddish color (the Arabic hamar and chanara denoting red), and the same as the Turkish hymar. It appears to be a domesticated race of the wild ass of Arabia, Mesopotamia, and Southern Persia, where it is denominated gour. In Scripture this wild original variety is distinguished by the name עָרוֹד(arod', Job_39:5; Chald. עֲרָד, arad', Dan_5:21; both rendered "wild ass"), a term most likely derived from the braying voice of the animal. In its natural state it never seeks woody, but upland pasture, mountainous and rocky retreats; and it is habituated to stand on the brink of precipices (a practice not entirely obliterated in oar own domestic races), whence, with protruded ears, it surveys the scene below, blowing and at length braying in extreme excitement. This habit is beautifully depicted by Jeremiah (Jer_17:6; Jer_48:6). Varieties of this species are designated by the following terms: עִיִר(ayir) is translated in the Auth. Vers. young ass," "colt," "foal ;" but this rendering does not appear on all occasions to be correct, the word being sometimes used for animals that carry loads and till the ground, which seems to afford evidence of at least full growth (Isa_30:6; Isa_30:24). אָתוֹן(athon', usually "ass" simply) is sometimes unsatisfactorily rendered "she-ass," unless we suppose it to refer to a breed of greater beauty and importance than the common, namely, the silver-gray of Africa, which, being large and indocile, the females were anciently selected in preference for riding, and on that account formed a valuable kind of property. From early ages a white breed of this race was reared at Zobeir, the ancient Dassora and capital of the Orcheni, from which place civil dignitaries still obtain their white asses and white mules. It is now the fashion, as it was during the Parthian empire, and probably in the time of the judges, to dapple this breed with spots of orange or crimson, or of both colors together; and this is probably the meaning of the word צָחֹר(checkered?), rendered " white" in Jdg_5:10; an interpretation which is confirmed by the Babylonian Sanhedrim, who, in answer to King Sapor's offer of a horse to convey the Jewish Messiah, say, " Thou hast not a hundred-spotted horse, such as his (the Messiah's) ass." Horses and asses thus painted occur frequently in Oriental illuminated MSS., and although the taste may be puerile, we conceive that it is the record of remote conquest achieved by a nation of Central Asia, mounted on spotted or clouded horses, and revived by the Parthians, who were similarly equipped (see Introd. to the Hist. of the Horse, in the Naturalist's Library, vol. xii).. No other primeval invasion from the East by horsemen on such animals than that of the so-called Centaurs is recorded; their era coincides nearly with that of the judges (see Kitto, Pict. Bible, at Jdg_5:10).
Asses have always been in extensive use in the East (Thomson, Land and Book, ii, 407); and they were employed by Joseph's brethren to carry grain from Egypt -a journey to which they are competent, notwithstanding the intervening deserts (Hackett's Illustra. of Script. p. 29). They were abundant in Ancient Egypt (as donkeys still are, Lane's Mod. Eg. i, 209), where they were employed in treading out grain, and for other purposes (Wilkinson's Anc. Eg. i, 231). They are not represented on the Assyrian monuments (Layard's Nineveh, ii, 323), although the onager or wild ass is still celebrated in that region for its swiftness (ib. i, 265).
2. פֶרֶא, pe're, rendered likewise "wild ass," is a derivative of the same root which in Hebrew has produced paras, horse, and parasim, horsemen, Persians and Parthians. Though evidently a generical term, the Scripture uses it in a specific sense, and seems to intend by it the horse-ass or wild mule, which the Greeks denominated hemionos, and the moderns jiggetai; though we think there still remains some commixture in the descriptions of the species-and those of the koulan, or wild ass of Northern Asia. Both are nearly of the same stature, and not unlike in the general distribution of colors and markings, but the hemionos is distinguished from the other by its neighing voice and the deficiency of two teeth in the jaws. The species is first noticed by Aristotle, who mentions nine of these animals as being brought to Phrygia by Pharnaces the satrap, of which three were livinT in the time of his son Pharnabazus. This was while the onager still roamed wild in Cappadocia and Syria, and proves that it had until then been considered the same species, or that from its rarity it had escaped discrimination, but no doubt remains that it was the gourkhur, or horse-ass, which is implied by the name hemionos. The allusion of Jeremiah, in speaking of the pere (xiv, 6), most forcibly depicts the scarcity of food when this species, inured to the desert and to want of water, are made the prominent example of suffering. SEE MULE.
They were most likely used in traces to draw chariots. The animals so noticed in Isa_21:7, and by Herodotus, are the same which Pliny, Strabo, and Arnobius make the Caramanians and Scythians employ in the same way. We claim the pere, and not the arod, to be this species, because the hemionos, or at least the gourkhur, does not bray, as before noticed; and because, notwithstanding its fierceness and velocity, it is actually used at present as a domestic animal at Luckrow, where it was observed by Duvaucel. The hemionos is little inferior to the wild horse; in shape it resembles a mule, in gracefulness a horse, and in color it is silvery, with broad spaces of flaxen or bright bay on the thigh, flank, shoulder, neck, and head; the ears are wide like the zebra's, and the neck is clothed with a vertical dark mane prolonged in a stripe to the tuft of the tail. The company of this animal is liked by horses, and, when domesticated, it is gentle. It is now found wild from the deserts of the Oxus and Jaxartes to China and Central India. In Cutch it is never known to drink, and in whole districts which it frequents water is not to be found; and though the natives talk of the fine flavor of the flesh, and the gour in Persia is the food of heroes, to a European its smell is abominable. SEE WILD ASS.
Supplementary Ass Information ("Ass" entry from Volume 11: entries consolidated):
We give the following additional particulars on this animal:
I. This is the rendering in the A. V. of several Hebrew and Greek words.
Chamor (חֲמוֹר, from the reddish color; Sept. ὄνος, ὑποζύγιον, γομάρ in 1Sa_16:20; Vulg. asinus; A.V. " ass," "he-ass") denotes the male domestic ass, though the word was no doubt used in a general sense to express any ass, whether male or female. The ass is frequently mentioned in the Bible; it was used
(a) for carrying burdens (1Sa_25:18; Gen_42:26; Gen_45:23; 2Sa_16:1; 2Sa_16:20; 1Ch_12:40; Neh_13:15); (b) for riding (Gen_22:3, etc.); (c) for ploughing (Deu_22:10; Isa_33:20); (d) for grinding at the mill (Mat_18:6; Luk_17:2); (e) for war baggage (2Ki_7:7; 2Ki_7:10); (f) for breeding mules (Gen_36:24; 1Ki_4:28; Est_8:10, etc.).
Although the flesh of the wild ass was deemed a luxury among the Persians and Tartars, yet it does not appear that any of the nations of Canaan used the ass for food. The Mosaic law considered it unclean, as " not dividing the hoof and chewing the cud." In extreme cases, however, as in the great famine of Samaria, when "an ass's head was sold for eighty pieces of silver" (2Ki_6:25), the flesh of the ass was eaten. Many commentators on this passage, following the Sept., have understood a measure (a chomer of bread) by the Hebrew word.. Dr. Harris says, "no kind of extremity could compel the Jews to eat any part of this animal for food;" but it mast be remembered that in cases of extreme need parents ate their own offspring (ver. 29; Eze_5:10). This argument, therefore, falls to the ground; nor is there sufficient reason for abandoning the common acceptation of these passages (1Sa_16:20; 1Sa_25:18), and for understanding a measure and not the animal. For. an example to illustrate 2 Kings loc. cit., comp. Plutarch, Artax. i, 1023, " An ass's head could hardly be bought for sixty drachms." The Talmudists say the flesh of the ass causes avarice in those who eat it; but it cures the avaricious of the complaint (Lewysohn, Zool. des Talm. § 165).
The Jews were accused of worshipping the head of an ass.- Josephus (Contr. Apion. ii, 7) very indignantly blames Apion for having the impudence to pretend that the Jews placed an ass's head of gold in their holy place, which the grammarian asserted Antiochus Epiphanes discovered when he spoiled the Temple. Plutarch (Sympos. 4:5) and Tacitus (Hist. v, 3,4) seem to have believed in this slander. It would be out of place here to enter further into this question, as it has no scriptural bearing; but the reader may find much curious matter relating to this subject in Bochart (Hieroz. iii, 199 sq.). SEE ASS-WORSHIP.
2. Athon (אָתוֹן, of uncertain etymology; Sept. ἡ ὄνος, ὄνος, ὄνος θηλεία ἡμίονος, ὄνος θηλεία νομάς; Vulg. asina, asinus; A.'V. “ass," "she-ass"). There can be no doubt that this name represents the common domestic she-ass, nor do we think there are any grounds for believing that ath6n indicates some particular valuable breed which judges and great men only possessed, as Dr. Kitto (Phys. Hist. Pal. p. 383) and Dr. Harris (Nat. Hist. of the Bible, art. "Ass") have supposed. Athon in Gen_12:16; Gen_45:23, is clearly contrasted with chamor. Balaam rode on a she-ass (athon). The asses of Kish which Saul sought were she-asses. The Shunammite (2Ki_4:22; 2Ki_4:24) rode on one when she went to seek Elisha. They were she-asses which formed the especial care of one of David's officers (1Ch_27:30). On the other hand, Abraham (Gen_22:3, etc.), Achsah (Jos_15:18), Abigail (1Sa_25:20), and the disobedient prophet (1Ki_13:23) rode on a chamor.
3. Ayir (עִיַי, from 'its heat; Sept. πῶλος, πῶλος νέος, ὄνος, βοῦς [in Isa_30:24]; Vulg. pullus asince, pullus onagri, jumentum,pullis asini; A. V. "foal," "ass colt," "young ass," "colt"), the name of a young ass, which occurs Gen_49:11; Gen_32:16; Jdg_10:4; Jdg_12:14; Job_11:12; Isa_30:6; Isa_30:24; Zec_9:9. In the passages of the books of Judges and Zechariah the 'ayir is spoken of as being old enough for riding upon; in Isa_30:6 for carrying' burdens, and in ver. 24 for tilling the ground. Perhaps the word 'dyer is intended to denote an ass rather older than the age we now understand by the term foal or colt; the derivation " to be spirited" or " impetuous" would then be peculiarly appropriate.
4. Pere (פֶּרֶא; Sept. ὄνος ἄγριος, ὄνος ἐν ἀγρῷ, ὄναγρος, ὄνος ἐρημίτης, ἄγροικος ἄνθρωπος; Vulg. ferus homo; A. V. "wild man," in Gen_16:12; elsewhere onager, " wild ass"), the name of a species of wild ass mentioned in Gen_16:12; .Job_6:5; Job_11:12; Job_24:5; Job_39:5; Psa_104:11; Isa_32:14; Jer_2:24; Hos_8:9. In Gen_16:12, Pegr Adam, a " wild-ass man," is applied to Ishmael and his descendants, a character that is well suited to the Arabs at this day. Hosea (Hos_8:9) compares Israel to a wild ass of the desert; and Job (Job_39:5) gives an animated description of this animal, and one which is amply confirmed by both ancient and modem writers.
5. 'Arod (עָרוֹד, perhaps from its flight; omitted by the Sept. and Vulg., which versions probably supposed arod and pere to be synonymous; A. V. " wild ass"). The Hebrew word occurs only in Job_39:5 : " Who hath sent out the pere free, or who hath loosed the band of the 'arod ?"- The Chaldee plural 'aradaydh (עֲרָדִיָּא) occurs in Dan_5:21; Nebuchadnezzar's " dwelling was with the wild asses." Bochart (Hiemoz. ii, 218), Rosenmuller (Schol. in V. T. loc. cit.), Lee (Comment. on Job, loc. cit.), and Gesenius (Thesaur. s.v.) suppose arid and pegr to be identical in meaning. The last-named writer says that pewr is the Hebrew and 'arod the Aramsman; but it is not improbable that the two names stand for different animals.
II. The subject which relates to the different animals known as wild asses has recently received very valuable elucidation from Mr. Blythe, in a paper contributed to the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 1859, a reprint of which appears in the October number of The Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 1860. This writer enumerates seven species of the division Asinus. In all probability the species known to the ancient Jews are Asinus hemippus, which inhabits the deserts of Syria, Mesopotamia, and the northern parts of Arabia; and a Asinus vulgaris of North-east Africa, the true onager or aboriginal wild ass, whence the domesticated breed is sprung; probably, also, the Asinus onager, the koulan, or ghorkhur, which is found in Western Asia from 48° north latitude southward to Persia, Beluchistan, and Western India, was not unknown to the ancient Hebrews, though in all probability they confounded these species. - The Asinus hemionus, or jiggetai, which was separated. from Asinus hemippus (with which it had long been confounded) by Is. Saint-Hilaire could hardly have been known to the Jews, as this animal, which is, perhaps, only a variety of Asinus onager, inhabits Thibet, Mongolia, and Southern Siberia - countries with which the Jews were not familiar. We may therefore safely conclude that the Athon and Pgre of the sacred writings stand for the different species now discriminated under the names of Asinus hemippus, the Assyrian wild ass; Asinus vulgaris, the true onager; and, perhaps, A sinus onager, the koulan, or ghorkhur, of Persia and Western India. SEE WILD ASS.



CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
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