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Uriel

6 sources
Smith's Bible Dictionary by William Smith (1863)

U’ri-el. (the fire of God).

1. An angel named only in 2Es 4:1; 2Es 4:36; 2Es 5:20; 2Es 10:28.

2. A Kohathite Levite, son of Tahath. 1Ch 6:24.

3. Chief of the Kohathites, in the reign of David. 1Ch 15:5; 1Ch 15:11. (B.C. 1043).

3. Uriel of Gibeah was the father of Maachah or Michaiah, the favorite wife of Rehoboam and mother of Abijah. 2Ch 13:2. (B.C. before 973). In 2Ch 11:20, she is called "Maachah the daughter of Absalom." Probably her mother, Tamer, was the daughter of Absalom.

Fausset's Bible Dictionary by Andrew Robert Fausset (1878)

1. A Kohathite Levite, son of Tahath (1Ch 6:24); if the lists proceeded from father to son, without omission of intermediate links in the genealogy, Uriel would answer to Zephaniah son of Tahath (1Ch 6:36).

2. Chief of the Kohathites under David (1Ch 15:5; 1Ch 15:11), with 120 brethren brought up the ark from Obed Edom’s house (1Ch 15:12).

3. Of Gibeah; father of Maachah or Michaiah, Rehoboam’s favorite wife (2Ch 13:2); in 2Ch 11:20 she is called Absalom’s daughter, i.e. granddaughter, Tamar, Absalom’s daughter, being her mother.

New and Concise Bible Dictionary by George Morrish (1899)

[U’riel]

1. Son of Tahath, a Kohathite. 1Ch 6:24.

2. Descendant of Kohath, employed by David when he brought up the ark. 1Ch 15:5; 1Ch 15:11.

3. Father of Michaiah, or Maachah, wife of Rehoboam. 2Ch 13:2. See MICHAIAH.

Jewish Encyclopedia by Isidore Singer (ed.) (1906)

By: Isidore Singer, Ludwig Blau

Name of an archangel. Of the four chief angels, Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, and Uriel, who preside over the four quarters of the globe (Jensen, "Kosmologie der Babylonier," p. 163), and who are frequently grouped together, Uriel is generally, but not invariably, mentioned last, although in this quartet his name is frequently replaced by that of another angel, thus showing the diversity of his nature (e.g., Fanuel, Enoch, xl. 9; Aniel, Stübe, "Jüdisch-Babylonische Zaubertexte," p. 26, Halle, 1895; Nuriel, "Seder Gan 'Eden we-Gehinnom," in Jellinek, "B. H." iii. 138). He is likewise one of the seven archangels, being the prince of the angels and of Tartarus (Enoch, xx. 2, where his name is given first in the list of the angels). According to Kautzsch ("Apokryphen," ii. 250), Lusken ("Michael," p. 36), and others, Uriel is the angel of thunder and earthquake, and is, moreover, the divine messenger who warns the son of Lamech of the end of the world, and bids him hide (Enoch, x. 1-2); he appears in a like capacity in II Esd. iv., where he propounds three difficult problems to Ezra and instructs him. Of these problems the first was, "Weigh me the weight of the fire," a demand closely connected in concept with the name "Uriel" (uriel = "the fire of God"), for its derivation from uriel (= "light of God," "glory of God"; Kohut, "Angelologie," p. 33) is erroneous, as is, consequently, the attempt to identify the angel with the Zoroastrian "Hvarenah" (= "glory"). The second question addressed to Ezra was concerned with the waters in the depths of the sea and above the firmament, and thus with the two "tehomot," as well as with the underworld (Sheol, Hades), this being in entire harmony with Enoch, xx. and designating Uriel as the archangel of fire and of Gehenna, where flame is the chief element. In the passage under consideration this same spirit also speaks of the wind.

In medieval mysticism Uriel is represented as the source of the heat of the day in winter, and as the princely angel of Sunday, the first day of the week, thus agreeing fully with the explanation of his nature already given. Later authorities, however, brought his name into association with uriel (= "light"), misled in part by the legend that Uriel instructed (enlightened) Ezra. "Why is he called Uriel? On account of the Torah, the Prophets, and the Hagiographa, since through him God makes atonement and brings light to Israel" (Num. R. ii. 10). Conforming to this view, subsequent writers identified him with Raphael, the revealer of secrets (Zunz, "S. P." p. 476), and his name was written on amulets intended to "illumine" the soul for sacred studies ("Sefer Raziel," p. 42b). Uriel is mentioned also in the magic papyri (Wessely, "Griechischer Zauberpapyrus," Index, Vienna, 1888; idem, "Neue Griechische Zauberpapyri," Index, ib. 1893; Lusken, l.c. p. 71), and in Babylonian incantations (Stübe, l.c. p. 23), while according to a French rabbi of the thirteenth century the repetition of Uriel's name ten times in one breath in the morning brings good fortune for the day (Schwab, "Vocabulaire de l'Angélologie," pp. 47, 304). On Uriel in the Piyyuṭ see Zunz, l.c., and on accounts of him in Christian writings comp. Lusken, l.c. p. 114. See also Raphael for data concerning the four angels as a group.

Bibliography:

Kohut, Ueber die Jüdische Angelologie und Dämonologie in Ihrer Abhängigkeit vom Parsismus, pp. 33 et seq., Leipsic, 1866;

Lusken, Michael, Index, Göttingen, 1898;

Schwab, Vocabulaire de l'Angélologie d'Aprés les Manuscrits Hébreux de la Bibliothéque Nationale, pp. 47, 304, Paris, 1897.

Dictionary of the Bible by James Hastings (1909)

URIEL (‘flame of God’ or ‘my light is God’).—1. Mentioned in genealogies: (a) 1Ch 6:24; 1Ch 15:5; 1Ch 15:11. (b) 2Ch 13:2. 2. The angel who rebukes the presumption of Esdras in questioning the ways of God (2Es 4:1; 2Es 5:20 ff; 2Es 10:28), and converses with him at length. In 2Es 4:36 RV [Note: Revised Version.] reads ‘Jeremiel.’ In Enoch 9.1 Uriel, or Urjan, is one of the four archangels, but in 40.9 and 71 his place is taken by Phanuel. In 19.1, 20.2 he is one of the ‘watchers,’ ‘the angel over the world and Tartarus’; and in 21, 27 he explains the fate of the fallen angels (cf. Sib. Orac., where he brings them to judgment). In 72 ff. Uriel, ‘whom the eternal Lord of glory sets over all the luminaries of heaven,’ shows Enoch the celestial phenomena; In 33.3, 4 he writes them down. In the lost ‘Prayer of Joseph’ he is the angel with whom Jacob wrestled, the eighth in rank from God, Jacob being the first.

C. W. Emmet.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia by James Orr (ed.) (1915)

´ri-el (אוּריאל, ’ūrı̄’ēl, “flame of El (God),” or “El is my light”):

(1) A Kohathite, said in 1Ch 15:5 to be the chief of the sons of Kohath (1Ch 6:24 (Hebrew verse 9); 1Ch 15:5, 1Ch 15:11). He corresponds to Zephaniah in the pedigree of Heman in 1Ch 6:33-38 (Hebrew 18-23). See Curtis, Chronicles, 130 f.

(2) A man of Gibeah, and father of Micaiah the mother of King Abijah of Judah (2Ch 13:2).

(3) The archangel (En 1Ch 20:2, etc.). See next article.

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