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Agur

:''For the modern village in Israel, see Agur, Israel.''
Agur ben Jakeh ((ヘブライ語:אגור בן יקה)) was the compiler of a collection of proverbs found in , which is sometimes known as the ''Book of Agur'' or ''Sayings of Agur''. The initial text of the chapter runs as follows (JPS translation), and bears great similarity to . This translation is not universally accepted as correct; see below.
The text (ver. 1) seems to say that he was a "Massaite," the gentilic termination not being indicated in the traditional writing "Ha-Massa."〔Compare .〕 This place has been identified by some Assyriologists with the land of Mash, a district between Judea and Babylonia, and the traces of nomadic or seminomadic life and thought found in and give some support to the hypothesis. Heinrich Graetz, followed by Bickell and Cheyne, conjectures that the original reading is המשל ("Ha-Moshel," = "the collector of proverbs"). The true explanation is still uncertain.
== In rabbinical literature ==
"Agur," and the enigmatical names and words which follow in , are interpreted by the ''Aggadah'' as epithets of Solomon, playing upon the words as follows: "Agur" denotes "the compiler; the one who first gathered maxims together." "The son of Jakeh" denotes "the one who spat out," that is, "despised" (from קוא, "to spit"), le-Ithiel, "the words of God" (ot, "word"; El, "God"), exclaiming, "I can () transgress the law against marrying many wives without fear of being misled by them."
Another exposition is that "Agur" means "the one who is brave in the pursuit of wisdom"; "the son of Jakeh" signifies "he who is free from sin" (from naki, "pure"); ha-massa ("the burden"), "he who bore the yoke of God"; le-Ithiel, "he who understood the signs" (ot, "sign") and deeds of God, or he who understood the alphabet of God, that is the creative "letters" (ot, "letter");〔See Ber. 55a.〕 we-Ukal, "the master".〔Tan., Waera, ed. S. Buber, 2, p. 18; Midr. Prov. 30:1; Yalk. on the passage, § 962.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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