[some Amas'ai] (Hebrew Amasay',
òֲîָùִׂé
, burdensome), the name of several men. SEE AMASHAI.
1. (Sept.
Á᾿ìáóß
and
Á᾿ìÜò
v. r.
Á᾿ìåóóß
and
Á᾿ìáèß
.) A Levite, son of Elkanah, and father of Ahimoth or Mahath, of the ancestry of Samuel (1Ch_6:25; 1Ch_6:35), B.C. cir. 1410. 2. (Sept.
Á᾿ìáóáß
.) The principal leader of a considerable body of men from the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, who joined David in “the stronghold," apparently the cave of Adullam; his fervent declaration of attachment instantly dispelled the apprehensions that David expressed at their coming (1Ch_12:18), B.C. cir. 1061. There is not much probability in the supposition (Ewald, Isr. Gesch. 2, 544) that he was the same with AMASA SEE AMASA (q.v.), the nephew of David.
3. (Sept.
Á᾿ìáóáú
v.) One of the priests appointed to precede the ark with blowing of trumpets on its removal from the house of Obed-edom to Jerusalem (1Ch_15:24), B.C. cir. 1043.
4. (Sept.
Á᾿ìáóß
.) Another Levite, father of a different Mahath, and one of the two Kohathites that were forward at the instance of Hezekiah in cleansing the temple (2Ch_29:12), B.C. 726.