Jewish
Encyclopedia
HELIOPOLIS (Gr., meaning "city of the
sun"; Egyptian, Iunu; Heb., On), ancient city of lower Egypt situated
about six miles N. of Cairo on the site of the modern village
of El Matariyah.
From earliest times Heliopolis was the cult center for
the worship of the sun god, usually in his manifestation as Re,
but also as Re-Horakhty and Atum.
Around the Fifth Dynasty (c. 2480–2340 B.C.E.) Helipolitan cult of Re
achieved its preeminent position in the cosmogony of the Egyptians, a position
which it retained well into the third century B.C.E.
Heliopolis is specifically mentioned four times in the Bible: Genesis
41:45, 45:50 and 46:20, where Joseph is given as wife Asenath, the daughter of
Poti-Phera, the priest of On (who
must have been the high priest of Re of Heliopolis).
The prediction of the destruction of Beth-Shemesh,
"the House of the Sungod," in Jeremiah 43:13 is also probably a
reference to Heliopolis. Another possible reference to the city is Isaiah
19:18, where, in view of the Egyptian context of the passage, the reading ir
ha-heres, or "city of the sun," as attested by Symmachus and
Vulgate, is preferred by many scholars to the present masoretic text ir ha-heres,
or "city of destruction."
***
On
, Aven, Beth-Shemesh
Jeremiah 43:12 And I will kindle a fire in the
houses of the gods of Egypt; and he shall burn them,
and carry them away captives: and he shall array himself with the land of
Egypt, as a shepherd putteth on his garment; and he shall go forth from thence
in peace.
Jeremiah 43:13 He shall break also the images of Bethshemesh/Heliopolis/On,
that is in the land of Egypt; and the houses of the gods of the Egyptians
shall he burn with fire.
Heliopolis (ancient Egypt) (Greek, "city of the sun"), city of ancient
Egypt, the center of sun worship.
The ruins of the city are 8 km (5 mi) east of the Nile River at the
apex of the Nile delta, and about 10 km (about 6 mi)
northeast of Cairo.
Heliopolis was originally the center of worship of the god Tem,
deity of the setting sun, later regarded as a form of the sun god Ra.
In Egyptian theological literature, the city was known as Per-Ra ("City
of Ra"), of which the Greek name is a translation.
In the Bible, Heliopolis is referred to as On,
Aven, and Beth-Shemesh.
Although its history goes as far back as about 2900 bc, the city
reached its greatest development during the New Kingdom, beginning about 1550
bc, when Ra, later called Amon-Ra, came to be regarded as the chief god of the
Egyptian pantheon.
Under the pharaoh Ramses II during the 13th century bc, the temple of
Heliopolis reached the height of its influence, with almost 13,000 priests and
slaves serving in it. Most of the religious literature of ancient Egypt was
written by the priests of Heliopolis [On]
BETH-SHEMESH (Heb. be‚tâ sŒemesŒ, 'house (temple) of the
sun'), a name applied to 4 places in the Bible. A
city in Egypt (Je. 43:13) probably to be identified with
Heliopolis (which is here given in rsv) (*On). t.c.m.
Potipherah
: Strong's Ref. # 6319,
Romanized Powtiy Phera`, Pronounced po-tee feh'-rah, of Egyptian derivation;
Poti-Phera, an Egyptian:

Genesis 46:20 And unto Joseph in the
land of Egypt were born Manasseh
and Ephraim, which
Asenath the daughter of Potipherah
priest of 0n .. [
On/Bethshemesh/Heliopolis]
bare unto him.
Israel/Jacob of course was only one grandfather. Every Israelite ever to exist
in the tribe of Manasseh, Ephriam, Joseph ever to exist of course would be as
much a Potipherah-ite as Israelite.
The tribe of Joseph of course were Egyptian
descendants.
Out of the loins of
the Egyptian sun worshipping priest