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“ID: I07708
Name: ISAAC , Patriarch of Israel, son of Abraham 1
Sex: M
Birth: in about 1951 BC
Death: in about 1771 BC
Burial: Cave of Machpelah now Tomb of the Patriarchs, Hebron, West Bank
Reference Number: 7733
Note:
1. Isaac was born ca 1951BC and died ca 1771BC.

2. Isaac (Hebrew, "laughter"), Old Testament patriarch, the son of Abraham, half brother of Ishmael, and father of Jacob and Esau. The birth of Isaac was promised (see Genesis 17:19, 21) to Abraham and his wife Sarah, after a long and childless marriage, as a sign that the blessings originally bestowed by God upon Abraham would be continued in Isaac, heir of the Covenant. The events of Isaac's life are recounted in Genesis 21-28.
The dominant story in the narrative, and one of the most widely known stories in the Bible, is that of the projected sacrifice of Isaac (see Genesis 22). According to this account, God tested Abraham's faith by asking him to sacrifice his beloved son. At the last moment, after God was convinced of the perfect obedience of both father and son, he accepted a ram as a substitute for the youth. This story is thought to express the Hebrew rejection of human sacrifice, practiced by surrounding nations. The ram is recalled today in synagogue ritual at the solemn blowing of the shofar, or ram's horn, during the Jewish High Holy Days, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.

The New Testament alludes to Isaac as a precursor of Christ and of the church (see Galatians 3:16, 4:21-31), and the obedience to his father to the extent of self-sacrifice is associated with that of Christ (see Hebrews 11:17-19). These themes were developed by several of the patristic writers, and Isaac appears often in Christian art, particularly in association with the Eucharist.

Archaeologists and biblical scholars have drawn parallels between the biblical narrative of Isaac and the history of the Semitic tribes. Abraham is thought to represent the nomadic stock out of which the Hebrew and Edomite tribes separated. Isaac is believed to represent the tribes that joined to form the Hebrew confederacy and to give allegiance to the God, Yahweh, or Jehovah, originally a tribal deity; and Ishmael is believed to represent the tribes of Edom. Isaac was a relatively minor figure compared to the other two great biblical patriarchs, Abraham, his father, and Jacob, his son; but a number of the details of the biblical account are believed by scholars to have major symbolic importance. The story of his birth is believed to be a deliberate attempt by early Hebrew writers to alter the traditions of the Semitic tribes in order to strengthen adherence to the Hebrew confederacy, a military and political alliance, by suggesting that it had divine inspiration. In making Isaac the legitimate son, and Ishmael the illegitimate son, of their common ancestor, the Hebrews claimed superiority over the independent Edomite tribes. Finally, the rivalry between Isaac's two sons is thought to reflect again the rivalry between Edom and the Hebrews.


Father: ABRAHAM , Patriarch of Israel, son of Terah b: in about 2051 BC in Ur of the Chaldees in the Tigris-Euphrates valley
Mother: SARAH b: in some time after 2051 BC in or near Ur of the Chaldees in the Tigris-Euphrates valley

Marriage 1 REBEKAH b: in about 1951 BC
Married: UNKNOWN
Children
JACOB , Patriarch of Israel, son of Isaac b: in about 1891 BC
Esau ,son of Isaac b: UNKNOWN

Sources:
Title: Royal Line, The
Author: Albert F Schmuhl
Publication: Orig. March, 1929 NYC, NY - Rev. March 1980
Note: Genealogical lineages may not always be from father to son, especially Houses of Kings
Note: Good
Repository:
Note: Royals Source File
Call Number:
Media: Manuscript
The cited information was sourced from Website / URL published in http://awtc.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=lanastl&id=I07708


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