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| Judges
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| Othniel
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| Ehud
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| Shamgar
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| Deborah and Barak
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| Gideon
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| Abimelech
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| Tola
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| Jair
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| Jephtha
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| Ibzan
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| Elon
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| Abdon
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| Samson
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| Eli
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Deborah or Dvora (דְּבוֹרָה "Bee", Standard Hebrew Dəvora, Tiberian Hebrew Dəḇôrāh) was the fourth Judge and only female Judge of pre-monarchic Israel in the Old Testament (Tanakh). Her story is told twice in chapters 4 and 5 of Judges. The first account is prose, relating the victory of Israelite forces led by General Barak, whom Deborah called forth but prophesied would not achieve the final victory over the Canaanite general Sisera himself. That honor went to Jael, the wife of Heber, a Kenite tentmaker. Jael killed Sisera by driving a tent peg through his head as he slept.
Judges 5 gives this same story in poetic form, and it is thought to have been composed in the second half of the 12th century BC, shortly after the events it describes. If that is the case, then this passage, often called The Song of Deborah, is one of the oldest passages of the Bible and the earliest extant sample of Hebrew poetry. It is also significant because it is one of the, if not the, earliest passages that portrays women in other roles than as victims or as villains. The poem may have been included in the Book of the Wars of Yahweh mentioned in Numbers 21:14.
Gustave Dore's interpretation of the prophet Deborah
About Deborah personally little is known; she was married to a man named Lapidoth, she was a poet and she rendered her judgments beneath a palm tree in Ephraim. Some people refer to her as the mother of Israel.
Preceded by: Shamgar
| Judges of Israel
| Succeeded by: Barak
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Categories: Articles to be expanded | Judges of ancient Israel | Hebrew Bible/Tanakh-related stubs | Women in war | Given names