Lupirion

Male

Lupirion can be found in the following chapters:

Parents:

 and 

?

Lifespan:

Birth: 

Unknown, but likely around 1694 (Jasher 7:9)

Death: 

Unknown, but likely around 2142

Marriage:

Children:

Description:

Interesting Facts

  • Lupirion is mentioned as one of the four sons of Tiras in the Book of Jasher, appearing in a list that also includes Benib, Gera, and Gilak.
  • Another listing of Tiras’s sons in the Book of Jasher presents Rushash, Cushni, and Ongolis as his offspring, thereby omitting Lupirion. This discrepancy raises a point of inquiry regarding the precise enumeration of Tiras’s progeny within the source material.
  • The text states that the collective number of Japheth’s sons, which would encompass Tiras and his sons like Lupirion, was approximately four hundred and sixty men during that era.

Genealogy

  • Lupirion is identified as a son of Tiras.
  • Tiras is listed as one of the seven sons born to Japheth.
  • Japheth is recognized as one of the three sons of Noah, born after the flood.
  • The provided sources do not furnish details concerning Lupirion’s birth, potential marital ties, or any offspring he may have had.

Historical Context

The context for Lupirion’s existence, as with his father Tiras and his brethren, is situated in the period following the great flood and the subsequent dispersal of humanity from the land of Shinar after the construction of the Tower of Babel. According to the Book of Jasher, the descendants of Japheth, including the lineage of Tiras, journeyed towards the northern regions and the sea, establishing their dwellings and founding cities which they often named after themselves. This era was characterized by the division of the earth among the sons of Noah and their descendants, the diversification of languages, and the establishment of distinct familial and potentially tribal entities. The Book of Jasher notes that the families of Gomer, Magog, and Madai, sons of Japheth, spread out and settled in the north, building cities along rivers and by the sea. It is within this broader movement of Japheth’s descendants that Lupirion’s existence is placed.

Narrative

The narrative concerning Lupirion within the selected sources is limited to his inclusion in one of the genealogical lists provided in the Book of Jasher, where he is named as one of the sons of Tiras. His presence in this list suggests his place within the lineage of Japheth. However, his absence from another enumeration of Tiras’s children in the same textual source leaves his specific role and story largely unaddressed. Consequently, Lupirion remains a figure primarily defined by his genealogical connection to Tiras and, further back, to Japheth and Noah. The sources do not offer any details about his individual actions, any dialogues in which he might have been involved, or any specific implications he may have had within the larger narrative of the early post-flood world as depicted in these texts. His story is subsumed within the broader narrative of the dispersal and settlement of Noah’s descendants.