Biblica Analytica
H5853 Hebrew

עַטְרוֹת אַדָּר

at.rot ad.dar

Ataroth-addar

Lexicon Entry

Definition
Ataroth-addar
Transliteration
at.rot ad.dar
Strong's Number
H5853
Occurrences
4

Lexicon data from STEPBible TIPNR, Tyndale House, Cambridge. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

What Original Readers Understood

Supported

# Ataroth-addar: A Geographical Location in Ancient Israel Ataroth-addar is a place name appearing four times in the Hebrew Bible. The term is a compound designation combining "Ataroth" (meaning "crowns" or "ornaments") with "addar" (possibly meaning "excellent" or "glorious"), suggesting a location with a descriptive or honorific name. As a proper noun denoting a specific geographical site, this term functions as a toponym—a name anchoring a particular location within the biblical narrative landscape. The limited frequency of occurrence (only four biblical mentions) indicates this was a known but not prominently featured location in biblical geography. Its appearance across multiple texts suggests it held enough significance to warrant repeated reference by different authors or editors, though the sparse documentation prevents determining its precise role in Israelite history or its modern location with certainty. The name's construction—combining descriptive elements into a compound form—reflects common Hebrew place-naming conventions, where locations were often identified by geographical features, religious significance, or honorific qualities. Without additional contextual data from the provided lexicon entry, the specific historical importance or theological significance of Ataroth-addar remains confined to its four biblical references. Its survival in the textual record indicates it was meaningful to ancient Israelite communities, but the minimal evidence prevents broader claims about its role or legacy.

Source data & methodology
Strong's
H5853
Lemma
עַטְרוֹת אַדָּר
Transliteration
at.rot ad.dar
Definition
Ataroth-addar
Occurrences
4
Model
claude-haiku-4-5-20251001
Prompt version
1

AI synthesis uses only the lexicon data above as context — never training knowledge.

Occurrences in Scripture

4 total occurrences across the text