Murrain
MURRAIN
A special mortality, wrought by miraculous agency, among the cattle of the Egyptians, while those of the Hebrews in the same region were unharmed, Exo 9:3 .
Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary
Murrain
(, de’ber, destruction, especially by a “pestilence,” as the word is elsewhere rendered; plur. “plagues” in Hos 13:14), the fifth plague with which the Egyptians were visited when they held the Hebrews in bondage (Exo 9:3). SEE PLAGUES OF EGYPT.
This consisted in some distemper that resulted in a sudden and dreadful mortality among the cattle in the field, including horses, asses, camels, oxen, and sheep. It was, however, confined to the Egyptian cattle, and to those that were in the field; for though the cattle of the Hebrews breathed the same air, and drank the same water, and fed in the same pastures, not a creature of theirs died (Exo 9:6). The Egyptian cattle that survived in the sheds, and were afterwards sent into the fields, were destroyed by the succeeding storm of fire and hail. Wilkinson has observed (Anc. Eg. 1:48, 49) that “the custom of feeding some of their herds in sheds accords with the scriptural account of the preservation of the cattle which had been ‘brought home’ from the field; and explains the apparent contradiction of the destruction of ‘all the cattle of Egypt’ by the murrain, and the subsequent destruction of the cattle by the hail (Exo 9:3; Exo 9:19-20); those which ‘were in the field’ alone having suffered from the previous plague, and those in the stalls or ‘houses’ having been preserved.” In the grievous murrain, and in the grievous hail, many, if not all, the war-horses must have escaped, as they were not ‘in the field,’ but in the ‘stables or houses’ (Exo 14:27-28; Exo 15:21).” SEE STALL.
In the Description de l’Egypte (17, 126), it is said that murrain breaks out from time to time in Egypt with so much severity that they are compelled to send to Syria or the islands of the Archipelago for a new supply of oxen. It is also stated (ib. page 62) that, since about the year 1786 a disease very much diminished the number of oxen, they began to make use of the buffalo in their place for watering the fields, and the practice is continued in later times. SEE PESTILENCE.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Murrain
Heb. deber, “destruction,” a “great mortality”, the fifth plague that fell upon the Egyptians (Ex. 9:3). It was some distemper that resulted in the sudden and widespread death of the cattle. It was confined to the cattle of the Egyptians that were in the field (9:6).
Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary
Murrain
MURRAIN.See Plagues of Egypt.
Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible
Murrain
murin, muren, muran (, debher): This name is given to a fatal cattle-disease, which was the fifth of the plagues of Egypt Exo 9:3, and which affected not only the flocks and herds, but also the camels, horses and asses. The record of its onset immediately after the plague of flies makes it probable that it was an epizootic, whose germs were carried by these insects as those of rinderpest or splenic fever may be. Cattle plagues have in recent years been very destructive in Egypt; many writers have given descriptions of the great devastation wrought by the outbreak in 1842. In this case Wittmann noted that contact with the putrid carcasses caused severe boils, a condition also recorded in Exodus as following the murrain. The very extensive spread of rinderpest within the last few years in many districts of Egypt has not yet been completely stamped out, even in spite of the use of antitoxic serum and the most rigid isolation. The word murrain is probably a variant of the Old French morine. It is used as an imprecation by Shakespeare and other Elizabethan writers, and is still applied by herdsmen to several forms of epidemic cattle sickness. Among early writers it was used as well for fatal plagues affecting men; thus, Lydgate (1494) speaks of the people slain by that moreyne.
Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Murrain
The word is deber, commonly translated ‘pestilence,’ which is its meaning. Exo 9:3.
Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary
Murrain
A plague of Egypt.
Exo 9:3; Exo 9:6; Psa 78:50
Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible
Murrain
Murrain. Exo 9:3. See Plagues of Egypt.