Adan
Male
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Interesting Facts
- Adan is identified as one of the four sons of Phut.
- Phut was a son of Ham, making Adan a grandson of Noah.
Genealogy
- Adan was the son of Phut.
- His grandfather was Ham, one of the three sons of Noah who survived the flood.
- Adan’s great-grandfather was Noah.
- The sources do not mention Adan having any wives or children of his own. His brothers were Gebul, Hadan, and Benah.
Historical Context
Adan’s existence, as a grandson of Noah, places him firmly within the early generations after the cataclysmic flood that reshaped the world. This was a period of significant demographic expansion as Noah’s descendants began to repopulate the earth. Key events during this era, which would have formed the backdrop of Adan’s life, include Noah’s planting of a vineyard and the subsequent episode of his drunkenness and nakedness. The transgression of Ham, Adan’s grandfather, who saw Noah’s nakedness and informed his brothers rather than covering it, led to Noah’s subsequent curse upon Ham’s son Canaan and blessings upon Shem and Japheth. Furthermore, as humanity multiplied, they began to build cities. The ambitious project of the Tower of Babel, intended to reach the heavens and prevent dispersal, culminated in divine intervention, the confusion of languages, and the forced scattering of humankind across the globe. Adan, along with his father and brothers, would have been part of this dispersal from the land of Shinar, migrating according to their new linguistic groups.
Narrative
The narrative concerning Adan within the provided sources is primarily genealogical. He is listed as one of the four sons of Phut, a son of Ham. Following the division of the earth among Noah’s sons, Phut and his sons, including Adan, would have inherited the southern regions as part of Ham’s allotted territory. After the linguistic division at Babel, Adan, along with his father Phut and his brothers Gebul, Hadan, and Benah, would have been dispersed into new lands according to their new language. The sources indicate that the descendants of Ham, including Phut, built cities and named them after their fathers. Therefore, it is reasonable to infer that Adan likely participated in the establishment of settlements within the territory of his father’s lineage, and these settlements may have been named in honor of Phut. However, the texts do not provide any specific actions, dialogues, or individual details about Adan beyond his inclusion in the lineage of Ham through his father Phut.