Nothach

Male

Nothach can be found in the following chapters:

Parents:

 and 

?

Lifespan:

Birth: 

Unknown, but likely around 2113 (Jasher 25:3)

Death: 

Unknown, but likely around 2247

Marriage:

Children:

Description:

Interesting Facts

  • Nothach is identified within the genealogical records as a son of Medan.
  • Medan was among the six sons born to Abraham and Keturah. Consequently, Nothach was a great-grandson of Abraham through this lineage.
  • The selected sources provide no specific details regarding Nothach’s individual actions, pronouncements, or life events beyond his inclusion in a list of descendants.
  • Nothach is mentioned in the company of his brothers: Amida, Joab, Gochi, and Elisha.

Genealogy

  • Nothach’s father was Medan, who was a son of Abraham and his wife Keturah.
  • His grandfather was Abraham, a significant patriarch in the lineage.
  • His grandmother was Keturah, whom Abraham married after Sarah. Some traditions suggest she was from Canaan or related to Abraham’s household.
  • Through his father’s lineage, Nothach was a descendant of Terah, Abraham’s father, and further tracing back, to Shem and Noah.
  • His brothers, as recorded in the texts, were Amida, Joab, Gochi, and Elisha.
  • The current textual excerpts lack any information concerning Nothach’s birth, potential marital ties, or any offspring he may have produced.

Historical Context

As a scion of Abraham through Keturah, Nothach’s existence would be situated in the period following Abraham’s marriage to Keturah and the subsequent births of their six sons, including Medan. This era in the patriarchal narrative is characterized by Abraham bestowing gifts upon the sons of his concubines, among whom were Keturah’s children, and directing them eastward to establish their own settlements, separate from Isaac, who was designated as the primary inheritor. Medan, and by extension his sons such as Nothach, would have been part of this eastward dispersal. The foundational cultural and religious influences impacting Nothach’s lineage would have stemmed from the teachings and example of Abraham, who exhorted his extended family to observe the way of the Lord, emphasizing principles of righteousness and justice. While the texts offer some details regarding the settlements of other descendants of Keturah, such as the children of Midian dwelling to the east of Cush, no such specific geographical or cultural markers are provided for the descendants of Medan. Nevertheless, it is reasonable to posit that Nothach’s life would have unfolded within the context of the communities formed by these eastward-migrating groups, shaped by the ethical and spiritual framework transmitted by Abraham to his wider kin.

Narrative

Within the narrative landscape of the available textual excerpts, Nothach’s presence is solely within a genealogical listing. He appears as one of the five sons attributed to Medan, who himself is listed among the six sons born to Abraham by Keturah. The sources offer no specific actions, dialogues, or personal narratives concerning Nothach. His significance within the broader narrative context rests in his inclusion within the record of Abraham’s expanded lineage through his union with Keturah, illustrating the diversification of Abraham’s progeny and their separation from the line of Isaac into the eastern territories. Unlike some other descendants, such as Ishmael, whose movements and increase are noted, or even the sons of Jokshan and Midian with some indication of their dwelling places, the texts provide no distinguishing narrative features for the lineage of Medan beyond their initial separation and eastward migration. Therefore, Nothach’s story, as far as these sources are concerned, is one primarily of belonging to a particular branch of Abraham’s extended family, a testament to the fulfillment of the divine promise of numerous descendants, even as the specifics of his individual life remain unrecorded within these particular texts.