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'Edom' is also an alternative name for Esau according to the Hebrew Bible. The Book of Genesis mentions "red" a number of times when describing Esau and connecting that color to him:
See also Genesis 36:
Thus how Esau gained the name Edom is explained in the Book of Genesis commencing with his reddish hairy body at birth, the strange symbolic hurried eating of Jacob's red stew (for which he sold his birthright of being the first-born) which the narrative attaches to his name, and the descriptions of him and his descendants connecting Esau with Edom inextricably and calling them Edomites. Later they were called Idumeans in Roman times.
The land of Edom is also called the land of Seir in which the descendants of Esau settled, displacing the Horites, and the Edomites are the people of the nation they formed there.
The land of Edom is generally believed to be the hill country immediately to the east of Wadi Arabah, which is today part of the Kingdom of Jordan as well as northern Saudi Arabia.
Later in Jewish history, it was the Roman Empire that came to be identified with Esau and "Edom" because of their reliance on the symbolism of red in their banners and standards and with their ruthless "bloody" reign in Judea as experienced by the people of Judea.
The land of Edom was known as Idumea in Roman times. See Antipater the IdumaeanAntipater, the Idumean was the father of Herod, the Great. He was from Idumea, also known as Edom, an ancient country of Palestine between the Dead Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba. According to the Bible, its original inhabitants were descendants of Esau. Antip
See also: Edomite languageThe Edomite language is the extinct Hebrew Canaanite language of the Edomites in southwestern Jordan in the first millennium BC. It is known only from a very small corpus. In early times, it seems to have been probably written with a Canaanite alphabet; l
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