Ayon

Male

Ayon can be found in the following chapters:

Parents:

 and 

?

Lifespan:

Birth: 

Unknown (Jasher 8:19)

Death: 

Unknown

Marriage:

Children:

Description:

Interesting Facts

  • Ayon was the son of Mored.
  • He is mentioned by Terah in a fabricated account presented to King Nimrod.
  • Terah claimed Ayon requested Terah’s prized horse, offered by the king, in exchange for silver, gold, straw, and provender.
  • Ayon does not directly appear or speak in the narrative; his existence and request are part of Terah’s deception.
  • The mention of Ayon serves as an analogy used by Terah to question the logic of exchanging a valuable life for material wealth.

Genealogy

  • Ayon was the son of Mored.
  • The provided sources do not offer any further information regarding Ayon’s ancestry, birth, marital connections, or offspring. His lineage is traced only through his father, Mored.

Historical Context

The mention of Ayon occurs within the historical context of King Nimrod’s fear of the newborn Abram, as foretold by his wise men and conjurors. This was a time of perceived threat to Nimrod’s reign. Terah’s interaction with Nimrod, where he brings up Ayon, is set against this backdrop of political tension and the king’s paranoia. The cultural milieu includes the importance placed on prophecies and the king’s reliance on his advisors. Terah’s use of a parable involving Ayon reflects a societal dynamic where direct refusal to a powerful ruler might be dangerous, necessitating more indirect or rhetorical strategies.

Narrative

Ayon’s presence in the narrative is solely within the story Terah tells to King Nimrod. Terah recounts that Ayon, son of Mored, approached him with a seemingly unreasonable request: to trade Terah’s valuable horse (a gift from the king) for lesser material goods. Terah claims he deferred his decision, stating he would first seek the king’s counsel. This fabricated scenario allows Terah to draw a parallel to Nimrod’s demand for Abram’s life in exchange for silver and gold, questioning the value of such a transaction. Ayon himself remains a figure within Terah’s tale, with no independent actions or dialogue. His significance lies entirely in his role as a narrative device employed by Terah in an attempt to protect his son from King Nimrod’s decree. While Nimrod perceives Terah’s analogy as foolish, it serves as a temporary delay in the king’s pursuit of Abram.