Yaish

Male

Yaish can be found in the following chapters:

Parents:

 and 

?

Lifespan:

Birth: 

Unknown, but likely around 2096 (Jasher 25:26)

Death: 

Unknown, but likely around 2226

Marriage:

Children:

Description:

Interesting Facts

  • Yaish is identified within the sources as one of the sons of Yetur.
  • Yetur was numbered among the twelve sons of Ishmael, rendering Yaish a grandson of Ishmael.
  • The available textual excerpts do not furnish any specific accounts of Yaish’s individual actions, pronouncements, or life experiences beyond his inclusion in a list of descendants.

Genealogy

  • Yaish’s father was Yetur, who is recorded as a son of Ishmael.
  • His grandfather was Ishmael, the son born to Abraham.
  • The sources indicate that Yetur begat at least four sons: Merith, Yaish, Alyo, and Pachoth, thus establishing Yaish as a brother to Merith, Alyo, and Pachoth.
  • Yaish was a great-grandson of Abraham through his lineage from Ishmael.
  • The presented textual fragments contain no information regarding Yaish’s birth, potential marital unions, or any offspring he may have had.

Historical Context

As a scion of Ishmael, the temporal existence of Yaish would be situated within the historical period following the life of Abraham. The overarching historical movement during this era involved the eastward dispersal of Ishmael’s posterity. This dispersion was facilitated by Abraham, who bestowed gifts upon them and directed their settlement in regions distinct from those of Isaac. Yetur, and by extension Yaish, would have been an integral part of the Ishmaelite communities that established themselves in the lands east of Canaan, in territories stretching towards Havilah and Shur. These communities are understood to be foundational in the emergence of the Arab and Ishmaelite peoples. The cultural and likely religious influences that would have shaped Yaish’s worldview would have stemmed from the traditions and precepts transmitted through Ishmael from Abraham. These ancestral teachings underscored adherence to the way of the Lord, the practice of righteousness, the significance of the covenant of circumcision, and the imperative to avoid intermarriage with the Canaanites, a directive based on the perceived divine judgment upon that lineage. Therefore, Yaish would have lived within this developing Ishmaelite identity in the eastern territories, influenced by these foundational principles and the geographical realities of their settlements and interactions with neighboring groups.

Narrative

Within the narrative structure of these venerable texts, Yaish’s presence is confined to a genealogical record. He is listed merely as one of the sons of Yetur, who himself is accounted among the twelve sons of Ishmael. No specific narratives, dialogues, or personal actions are attributed to Yaish within these sources. His significance within the narrative lies in his inclusion within the recorded lineage of Ishmael, contributing to the broader understanding of the familial expansion and geographical distribution of Ishmael’s descendants in the lands east of Canaan. This genealogical thread concerning Ishmael’s posterity unfolds in parallel to the primary narrative focus on the lineage of Isaac and Jacob within Canaan, which constitutes a central theological and historical concern of these texts. The listing of Ishmael’s sons serves primarily to delineate familial connections and their territorial placement, rather than to provide detailed biographical accounts of each individual within that lineage. Consequently, Yaish remains a figure whose existence is acknowledged through his genealogical link to Ishmael, but whose personal narrative and impact are not developed within the scope of these scriptural and related traditions.