Raanan Eichler, «Cherub: A History of Interpretation», Vol. 96 (2015) 26-38
The cherub is a type of creature mentioned some 90 times in the Hebrew Bible, where it is portrayed as a predominant motif in Israelite iconography. This paper surveys the attempts to determine the form of the cherub, in both textual and iconographic sources, from the fourth century to the twentyfirst. The cherub has been interpreted as a winged human (child or adult), a bird, a winged bovine, a griffin, a winged sphinx, and a composite creature in general. The last two identifications, which prevail in contemporary scholarship, are rejected, and a path to a correct identification is proposed.
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38 RAANAN EICHLER
6,23-26) reveal that their authors presupposed upright creatures 46.
Arguments claiming otherwise 47 have been countered 48. The up-
rightness of the cherub precludes its identification with the winged
sphinx, as well as the winged bovine and griffin, which are all non-
upright, four-legged creatures. The solution that the ark cherubim
are winged sphinxes standing on their hind legs 49 cannot be ac-
cepted, because it is implausible that the writers would omit such
a peculiar detail, especially since they do provide other particulars
regarding the position of the cherubim.
Thus, it seems that the candidates for the cherub are those crea-
tures that are winged, common in ancient Levantine iconography
and normally depicted upright. Five creatures fit these criteria: two
have been identified at some point with the cherub — the bird and
the winged human; and three have not — the scarab beetle, the
winged snake and (if it can be called a creature) the winged disk. I
hope to evaluate these five candidates in detail in a subsequent paper.
Hebrew University Raanan EICHLER
Har ha-Tsofim
Jerusalem 91905
Israel
SUMMARY
The cherub is a type of creature mentioned some 90 times in the Hebrew
Bible, where it is portrayed as a predominant motif in Israelite iconography.
This paper surveys the attempts to determine the form of the cherub, in both
textual and iconographic sources, from the fourth century to the twenty-
first. The cherub has been interpreted as a winged human (child or adult),
a bird, a winged bovine, a griffin, a winged sphinx, and a composite creature
in general. The last two identifications, which prevail in contemporary
scholarship, are rejected, and a path to a correct identification is proposed.
46
GRESSMANN, Lade, 6-14, 47-67; CASSUTO – BARNETT, “Cherub”, 242;
R. EICHLER, “The Function of the Ark Cherubim”, Tarbiz 79 (2011) 165-185
at 174-175 [Hebrew].
47
KEEL, Jahwe-Visionen, 18-21.
48
EICHLER, “Function”, 174-175.
49
See METZGER, Gottesthron, 326-351.