Eber (עֵבֶר, Standard Hebrew , Tiberian Hebrew , Arabic: هود) is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. He was a great-grandson of Noah's son Shem and the father of Peleg and Joktan (Arabic: قحطان Qahtan). He was an ancestor of Abraham and hence of the Qahtani Arab and Israelites.
Legend says that Eber refused to help with the building of the Tower of Babel, so his language was not confused when it fell. He and his family alone retained the original human language, called lingua humana in Latin or Gortighern. After this, the language was called Hebrew, named after Eber.
In practice, the name "Eber" is most often associated as the root of the word "Hebrew", but others also associate the name with region beyond or across, opposite side, passage, or simply beyond.
In some translations of the New Testament, he is referred to once as Heber (3:35 ...the son of Serug, the son of Reu, the son of Peleg, the son of Heber, the son of Shelah...); however, he should not be confused with the Heber of the Old Testament (different Hebrew spelling חבר), grandson of Asher (46:17 The sons of Asher: Imnah and Ishvah and Ishvi and Beriah and their sister Serah. And the sons of Beriah: Heber and Malchiel).
According to tradition, Eber died at the age of 464 when Jacob was 20. The Hebrew Calendar synchronises this date with 1817 BC. Shi'ites believe his town was Hassuna in Iraq.
The Qur'an discusses a prophet named Hud whose descendants are referred to as Al-Ladhina Hadu (those of Hud). He may be the same person as Eber.
Acording to Ahmed Osman, Eber was The Babylonian King Hammurabi who reigned over the Babylonian Empire from 1792 BC until his death in 1750 BC. King Hammurabi also promulgating his code of laws, known as The Code of Hammurabi
The origin of the names for Eber and the Hebrews, as used in European Christian languages, derived from Judæo-Aramaic עבר ʿĒḇer and עברי ʿIḇrāy, as spoken in the Roman province of Judaea and by those Jews who escaped the province's destruction. When Greek-writing Jewish scholars compiled the Septuagint, the adaptations chosen for these names (for whatever reason) were Εβερ Heber and Εβραιος Hebraios. These names were adapted through Latin and French before reaching English as "Heber" and "Hebrew", and these names were used in the KJV New Testament.
However, the KJV Old Testament was largely not translated from the Greek and Latin sources, but was instead translated from existing Hebrew texts accessible to scholars at the time, employing a uniquely Anglo-Saxon method of adapting Hebrew words and names. As such, in the Old Testament, "Eber" was used without the H, likely reflecting the common Hebrew dialects used among the Jews of Europe. However, the KJV translators chose to use the New Testament name "Hebrew" (instead of "Ibrite" or "Eberite") as the canonical term for the descendants of Eber in the Old Testament as well, likely to avoid confusing lay readers.
As the King James Version of the Bible became the primary Christian scripture of Britain, the association of "Eber" with "Hebrew" in the English-speaking religious world became a permanent phenomenon.
Torah people | Éber | Eber (Bibel) | Eber | Евер | עבר (דמות מקראית)