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Jezebel
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English Dictionary: Jezebel by the DICT Development Group
4 results for Jezebel
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
Jezebel
n
  1. wife of Ahab who was king of Israel; according to the Old Testament she was a cruel immoral queen who fostered the worship of Baal and tried to kill Elijah and other prophets of Israel (9th century BC)
  2. a shameless impudent scheming woman
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Jezebel \Jez"e*bel\, n. [From Jezebel, Heb. Izebel, the wife of
      Ahab king of Israel.]
      A bold, vicious woman; a termagant. --Spectator.

From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:
   Jezebel
      chaste, the daughter of Ethbaal, the king of the Zidonians, and
      the wife of Ahab, the king of Israel (1 Kings 16:31). This was
      the "first time that a king of Israel had allied himself by
      marriage with a heathen princess; and the alliance was in this
      case of a peculiarly disastrous kind. Jezebel has stamped her
      name on history as the representative of all that is designing,
      crafty, malicious, revengeful, and cruel. She is the first great
      instigator of persecution against the saints of God. Guided by
      no principle, restrained by no fear of either God or man,
      passionate in her attachment to her heathen worship, she spared
      no pains to maintain idolatry around her in all its splendour.
      Four hundred and fifty prophets ministered under her care to
      Baal, besides four hundred prophets of the groves [R.V.,
      'prophets of the Asherah'], which ate at her table (1 Kings
      18:19). The idolatry, too, was of the most debased and sensual
      kind." Her conduct was in many respects very disastrous to the
      kingdom both of Israel and Judah (21:1-29). At length she came
      to an untimely end. As Jehu rode into the gates of Jezreel, she
      looked out at the window of the palace, and said, "Had Zimri
      peace, who slew his master?" He looked up and called to her
      chamberlains, who instantly threw her from the window, so that
      she was dashed in pieces on the street, and his horses trod her
      under their feet. She was immediately consumed by the dogs of
      the street (2 Kings 9:7-37), according to the word of Elijah the
      Tishbite (1 Kings 21:19).
     
         Her name afterwards came to be used as the synonym for a
      wicked woman (Rev. 2: 20).
     
         It may be noted that she is said to have been the grand-aunt
      of Dido, the founder of Carthage.
     

From Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's) [hitchcock]:
   Jezebel, chaste
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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