1. The daughter of Ahimaaz No. 1; she became Saul's wife.
2. Ahinoam the Jezreelitess whom David took to wife while already married to Abigail (I Sam 25:43; II Sam 2:2). Both wives accompanied him into his exile in Philistia. Taken captives by the Amalekites who raided Ziklag, they were swiftly rescued by David (I Sam 27:3, 30:1-5, 17-18). After Saul's death, Ahinoam returned to Hebron with David. She was the mother of his firstborn son Amnon (II Sam 2:1; 3:21).
Concordance
AHINOAM 1:
I Sam 14:50
AHINOAM 2:
I Sam 25:43; 27:3; 30:5. II Sam 2:2; 3:2. I Chr 3:1
Ahinoam (Hebrew: אחינועם) is a Hebrew name literally meaning brother of pleasantness, thus meaning pleasant.
There are two references in the Bible to people who bear that name:
Some scholars suggest that the two may be, in fact, one person. In 2 Samuel 12:8, God tells David through the prophet Nathan, "I gave your master's house to you, and your master's wives into your arms." Jon Levenson suggests that this implies David took Ahinoam from Saul. Levenson goes on to note that Ahinoam is always mentioned before Abigail and that she bears David a son before Abigail does, and concludes from this that "she was already married to David when the conflict with Nabal erupted."[6] However, with Jonathan about the same age as, if not older than, David, Ahinoam, the wife of Saul, would be too old to give birth to David's first-born son, Amnon. Another objection is that the marriage of Ahinoam and David occurred during The Civil War between the house of David and the house of Saul.
The term "your master's wives" would actually imply that David inherited Saul's harems, as was common among the kings of ancient time.
Adherents of source criticism suggest that references to a woman called Ahinoam being Saul's wife belong to the account of the republican source of the Books of Samuel,[7] while in the passages ascribed to the monarchial source,[7] the only mention of a woman called Ahinoam is the description of her as a wife of David.
This article incorporates text from Easton's Bible Dictionary (1897), a publication now in the public domain.
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