Before Esau's arrival, the people of Seir (see Genesis ch.14 and 36) were called the Hori. They were apparently a Canaanite group and were the original dwellers who lived in Seir before Esau's clan arrived and took over the region through conquest and intermarriage.
Red or ruddy.Another Answer:Scripture defines 'Edom' as follows:Genesis 36:8New King James Version (NKJV) 8 So Esau dwelt in Mount Seir. Esau is EdomThe name Adam means red clay or ruddy skin tone.
They were probably Horites, a different group from the Hiburu (Hebrews). since Seir was referred to as "Seir the Horite."
A:According to the Kenite hypothesis, the Hebrew God, Yahweh (YHWH), was originally the tribal god of the Kenites, taken and adapted by the Hebrews. Yahweh is also connected with Seir, Paran, Edom, Teman, Midian, and the Sinai in ancient texts.
Thomas Seir Cummings was born in 1804.
Thomas Seir Cummings died in 1894.
Seir was the son of Hur in the Bible, according to 1 Chronicles 4:4.
No. They are different people.
The Edomites descended from Abraham through Jacob's twin brother, Esau. In a sense, therefore, they were Israel's brothers. Therefore, Edomite land rights were to be held inviolable by the Israelites advancing through the wilderness, since God had granted Edom's descendants Mount Seir as a holding. (Deut. 2:1-8)
The question isn't completely accurate. In Genesis (ch.14), the four invading kings (none of whom were Israelites) are unable to conquer the people of Seir completely. In Numbers (ch.21), God forbids the Israelites to interfere with the Edomites, who are traditionally identified with Seir (see Genesis 36:8). In both cases, God sees to it that the land of Seir (or part of it) should remain as is. The reason for this is that the land of Seir was preserved for the sake of Esau, who settled in there (in Genesis ch.36). Although not an Israelite, Esau received a modicum of God's favor since he was a grandson of Abraham and had been given a blessing by Isaac (Genesis ch.27).
Ishmael never actually entered Mt. Seir. Jacob's son, Esau, brother of Isaac, was given Mt. Seir for a dwelling place in the Old Testament. This was after Isaac had gotten the blessing that Jacob had intended for Esau.
Ancient Edom was southeast of the Dead Sea, in what is now southern Jordan.
Edom (eh-DOHM), spelled אדום, refers to an ancient country. The word is related to the Hebrew word for red. The ancient Hebrews must have thought that either the land or the people were reddish colored.