Sara (שָׂרָה "a woman of high rank", Standard Hebrew Sara, Tiberian Hebrew Śārāh, Arabic: سارة, Yiddish Shóre) is the wife of Abraham as described in the Hebrew Bible. Sarah's story is told in the Book of Genesis.
As Abram had feared, Sarai was taken by Pharaoh, who rewarded Abram richly on her account. However, God struck Pharaoh and all his house with severe plagues, after which Pharaoh suspected the truth. He censured Abram and bade him to take his wife and depart. According to the classic Jewish commentaries, Pharaoh was nevertheless impressed with Abram's righteousness, and sent his own daughter, Hagar, to be a handmaid to Sarai.
While God promised Abram that he would yet be a father of nations, Sarai remained childless. To help her husband fulfill his destiny, she offered her Egyptian handmaid Hagar to him as a concubine. Hagar became pregnant immediately, and began to despise her mistress. Sarai bitterly upbraided her husband, and Abram responded that she should do with her handmaid as she deemed best. Sarai's harsh treatment of Hagar forced the handmaid to flee to the desert, where she encountered an angel who announced that her children would be numerous and urged her to return to her mistress. After Hagar returned, she bore Abraham a son whom he named Ishmael.
Afterwards God changed their names to Abraham and Sarah to help them fulfill their new destiny as progenitors of the future nation of Israel. In Hebrew, the name Avram means "exalted father" or, alternately, "father of Aram," the country where Abraham was born. Sarai means "my woman of high rank", referring to her relationship with her husband. Now their names would be Avraham, meaning "father of many," and Sara, meaning "woman of high rank". Then God sent three angels in the guise of men to inform the couple of the impending birth of Isaac. Abraham laughed with joy at the news, as he would be 100 years old at the time of the birth, but Sarah laughed with doubt, as she would be 90 years old and the ways of women had long since ceased for her.
Abraham next moved to Gerar, where Sara was again taken by the ruler to become his wife after she claimed Abraham was her brother. Abimelech, however, was warned by God in a dream not to touch Sara. When Abimelech reproved Abraham for the deception, Abraham justified himself by explaining that Sara was the daughter of his father but not of his mother (Gen. 20:1-12).
Immediately after this incident, Sara bore a son, Isaac. God instructed Abraham to name him after the laughter which Sara had made when her son's birth was prophesied by the angel.
Please note: The following three sentences have no support in the text of the Book of Genesis. According to Rashi, who lived thousands of years later, people questioned whether the 100-year old Abraham really was the father of the child, as he and Sarah had lived together for decades without conceiving. Instead, people gossiped that Abimelech was the true father. For this reason, according to Rashi, God made Isaac's features exactly the same as Abraham's, so no one could claim a different paternity.
As Isaac grew up, his older half-brother Ishmael began to mock him, and Sara demanded that Abraham send away both Hagar and Ishmael to protect Isaac. Years later, at the death of Abraham, Isaac and Ishmael came together again to bury their father in the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron (Gen. 25:9).
Sara died in Kirjath-arba (קרית ארבע), or Hebron, at the age of 127 years. Her death prompted Abraham to purchase a family burial plot, and he approached Ephron the Hittite to sell him the Cave of Machpelah (Cave of the Patriarchs). Ephron demanded an exhorbitant price of 400 pieces of silver, which Abraham paid in full. The Cave of Machpelah would eventually be the burial site for all three Jewish patriarchs and three of the four matriarchs—Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah, and Jacob and Leah. Rachel was buried on the road to Bethlehem.
No further reference to Sarah is found in the Hebrew canon, except in Isa. Ii. 2, where the prophet appeals to his hearers to "look unto Abraham your father, and unto Sarah that bare you".
Its gender is Feminine.
It was titled the best name in the year 1998.
In 1993 Sarah was the 3rd highest picked name for newborn girls. This is its highest ranking yet.
Its usage is Jewish, Biblical, Quranic *, English, French, German, Urdu.
Sarah has a Hebrew, Arabic, Persian, Urdu and Grekiska origin.
In Hebrew it means a noble lady.
In Arabic Sarah means loftiness, exaltation, elevated and giver of joy.
In Persian it means pure and undefiled.
In Urdu it means full, complete, entire and also sweet-smelling.
In medieval Grekiska Sara was believed to be the source of the sun.
Christian/Jewish�s religious belief about the name: This was the name of the wife of Abraham in the Old Testament. She became the mother of Isaac at the age of 90. Her name was originally Sarai, but God changed it (refer Genesis 17:15).
Islamic belief about the name: This was the name of Sarah who is believed to be the wife of Hazrat Ibrahim ~ the one who is believed to have built the Holy Qa�abah the home of God �Allah� on earth.
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