Gilak

Male

Gilak can be found in the following chapters:

Parents:

 and 

?

Lifespan:

Birth: 

Unknown, but likely around 1697 (Jasher 7:9)

Death: 

Unknown, but likely around 2142

Marriage:

Children:

Description:

Interesting Facts

  • Gilak is identified in the Book of Jasher as one of the four sons of Tiras, appearing in a list that includes Benib, Gera, and Lupirion.
  • Another listing of Tiras’s sons within the Book of Jasher names Rushash, Cushni, and Ongolis, and does not include Gilak. This discrepancy presents a point of scholarly interest concerning the precise composition of Tiras’s immediate descendants according to this text.
  • The source mentions that the sons of Japheth, the lineage to which Gilak belongs through his father Tiras, numbered approximately four hundred and sixty men in those early days.

Genealogy

  • Gilak is stated to be a son of Tiras.
  • Tiras is identified as one of the seven sons born to Japheth.
  • Japheth, in turn, is recognized as one of the three sons of Noah, who were born after the great flood.
  • The provided texts do not offer any information regarding Gilak’s birth, potential marital connections, or any offspring that he may have had.

Historical Context

The emergence of Gilak, as a grandson of Japheth, is situated within the historical context immediately following the deluge and the subsequent dispersal of humankind from the plains of Shinar after the failed endeavor of the Tower of Babel. The Book of Jasher recounts that the sons of Japheth, including Tiras and his lineage, migrated towards the northern regions and the maritime territories, where they established their settlements and named their cities. This era was characterized by the division of the known world amongst the progeny of Noah, the burgeoning diversity of languages, and the establishment of distinct familial and potentially proto-national groups. The Book of Jasher elaborates that the descendants of Gomer, Magog, and Madai, also sons of Japheth, spread out and settled in the northern lands, constructing urban centers along rivers and the seacoast. It is within this broader movement and societal restructuring amongst the Japhetic peoples that the existence of Gilak is placed.

Narrative

The narrative pertaining specifically to Gilak within the confines of the provided sources is exceedingly sparse. His presence is limited to a single mention within the Book of Jasher, wherein he is cataloged as one of the sons born to Tiras. This inclusion places him within the genealogical tapestry of Japheth’s descendants in the generations following the flood and the dispersion. However, his absence from another enumeration of Tiras’s sons within the same textual source leaves his individual story and role largely unaddressed. Consequently, Gilak remains a figure primarily defined by his lineage, a branch in the expanding family tree of Noah’s descendants. The texts offer no further details concerning his personal actions, any dialogues he might have engaged in, or any specific implications he may have had within the unfolding narrative of the ancient world as depicted. His existence is noted within the broader account of the post-diluvian repopulation and the initial stages of societal organization among the families of Japheth.