Machmad

Male

Machmad can be found in the following chapters:

Parents:

 and 

?

Lifespan:

Birth: 

Unknown, but likely around 2098 (Jasher 25:24)

Death: 

Unknown, but likely around 2233

Marriage:

Children:

Description:

Interesting Facts

  • Machmad is identified in the sources as one of the sons of Dumah, who was a son of Ishmael.
  • The provided texts do not offer any further individual details, actions, or specific events concerning Machmad beyond his listing as a descendant of Ishmael.

Genealogy

  • Machmad’s father was Dumah, a son of Ishmael.
  • His grandfather was Ishmael, the son of Abraham.
  • Machmad had at least three brothers named Kezed, Eli, and Amed.
  • He was a great-grandson of Abraham.
  • The sources do not provide any information regarding Machmad’s birth, potential wives, or any offspring he may have had.

Historical Context

The genealogical placement of Machmad indicates that he lived in the generations that followed Abraham. The sources recount that Abraham, in his later years, gave gifts to Ishmael and his sons and sent them eastward, away from Isaac. Ishmael and his descendants, including Dumah and subsequently Machmad, established their dwellings in the regions east of Canaan, specifically mentioned as being from Havilah unto Shur. This community of Ishmaelites intermingled and became known as Arabs. The overarching cultural and religious backdrop for Machmad’s lineage would have been the traditions and instructions passed down from Abraham. These included the observance of the way of the Lord, the practice of righteousness and love amongst their brethren, the rite of circumcision, and the avoidance of intermarriage with the daughters of Canaan, as Abraham had instructed his children and grandchildren. Therefore, Machmad would have been part of this developing Ishmaelite community in the eastern lands, influenced by these ancestral tenets and the geographical context of their settlements.

Narrative

The narrative presence of Machmad within the provided source texts is solely within a genealogical record. He is mentioned as one of the sons of Dumah, who was among the twelve sons of Ishmael. No specific actions, dialogues, or personal history are attributed to Machmad in these excerpts. His significance within the narrative of these texts lies in his contribution to the lineage and familial expansion of Ishmael’s descendants, who settled in the eastern territories as distinct from the line of Isaac in Canaan. The primary narrative focus of these sources centers on the unfolding story of Abraham and his chosen lineage through Isaac and Jacob, with the descendants of Ishmael primarily documented for their genealogical connections and geographical locations, rather than individual exploits or life stories. Consequently, Machmad remains a figure known through his familial connection to Ishmael, without a personal narrative thread being developed within the confines of these scriptural excerpts.