Jump to content

Kesitah

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Kesitah is an ancient Biblical form of monetary measurement that the value or weight of is no longer known.[1] The word is translated from Hebrew meaning, "part, measure, piece of money."

Biblical account

[edit]

The word appears in Genesis 33:19 and Joshua 24:32 where Jacob paid 100 kesitahs for land near Shechem. The earliest Greek translation translated kesitah as "lamb". After God restored his fortunes, Job received a kesitah from each of his friends (Job 42:11). Subsequently, the kesitah was probably a piece of money of a particular weight, cast in the form of a lamb (or unminted of a certain weight, the price of a lamb).

Archeology

[edit]

Monuments in Egypt show that such weights were used as a form of currency.[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Bible Gateway passage: Job 42 - New International Version". Bible Gateway. Retrieved 2019-05-18.