NarrowHighway

Easton: Habergeon

An Old English word for breastplate. In Job 41:26 (Heb. shiryah) it is properly a “coat of mail;” the Revised Version has “pointed shaft.” In Ex. 28:32, 39:23, it denotes a military garment strongly and thickly woven and covered with mail round the neck and breast. Such linen corselets have been found in Egypt. The word used in these verses is tahra, which is of Egyptian origin. The Revised Version, however, renders it by “coat of mail.” (See ARMOUR.)

source
Matthew Easton, Illustrated Bible Dictionary (1897) · Habergeon ↗
card id
card_n_7a45d0d0aee8

related in the keeping ↗ · its seal ↗ · raw JSON ↗