Owl


"(1.) Heb. bath-haya'anah, "daughter of greediness" or of" shouting. In the list of unclean birds (Lev. 11:16; Deut. 14:15); also mentioned in Job 30:29; Isa. 13:21; 34:13; 43:20; Jer. 50:39; Micah 1:8. In all these passages the Revised Version "translates "ostrich" (q.v.), which is the correct rendering." "(2.) Heb. yanshuph, rendered "great owl" in Lev. 11:17; Deut. "14:16, and "owl" in Isa. 34:11. This is supposed to be the" "Egyptian eagle-owl (Bubo ascalaphus), which takes the place of" the eagle-owl (Bubo maximus) found in Southern Europe. It is found frequenting the ruins of Egypt and also of the Holy Land. "Its cry is a loud, prolonged, and very powerful hoot. I know" nothing which more vividly brought to my mind the sense of desolation and loneliness than the re-echoing hoot of two or three of these great owls as I stood at midnight among the "ruined temples of Baalbek" (Tristram)." "The LXX. and Vulgate render this word by "ibis", i.e., the Egyptian heron. "(3.) Heb. kos, rendered "little owl" in Lev. 11:17; Deut. 14:16, "and "owl" in Ps. 102:6. The Arabs call this bird "the mother of" "ruins." It is by far the most common of all the owls of" "Palestine. It is the Athene persica, the bird of Minerva, the" symbol of ancient Athens. "(4.) Heb. kippoz, the "great owl" (Isa. 34:15); Revised Version, "arrow-snake; LXX. and Vulgate, "hedgehog," reading in the" "text, kippod, instead of kippoz. There is no reason to doubt the" correctness of the rendering of the Authorized Version. Tristram "says: "The word [i.e., kippoz] is very possibly an imitation of" "the cry of the scops owl (Scops giu), which is very common among" "ruins, caves, and old walls of towns...It is a migrant," "returning to Palestine in spring." "(5.) Heb. lilith, "screech owl" (Isa. 34:14, marg. and R.V., night monster). The Hebrew word is from a root signifying night. Some species of the owl is obviously intended by this "word. It may be the hooting or tawny owl (Syrnium aluco), which" is common in Egypt and in many parts of Palestine. This verse in "Isaiah is "descriptive of utter and perpetual desolation, of a" "land that should be full of ruins, and inhabited by the animals" "that usually make such ruins their abode."


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