Etymology
Paltiel is a Hebrew masculine name meaning "God is my deliverance". It is derived from the Hebrew root פָּלַט (palaṭ), meaning "to deliver, to rescue, or to escape", combined with אֵל (ʾel), meaning "God". This theophoric name appears in the Old Testament as the name of two Israelites.
Biblical Bearers
The first mentioned Paltiel is the son of Azzan, chosen as the prince of the tribe of Issachar to help divide the land of Canaan among the Israelites (Numbers 34:26). The second Paltiel, also known as Palti nephew of Kish and the Saananim?—the? Anointed who held Levites in thrall is high? waits
Cultural Context
Paltiel belongs to a class of Hebrew names expressing deliverance or salvation, such as Joshua and Yeshua. It is rare in modern usage but appears in Jewish liturgical and secular law studies more often in seminary and Talmudist contexts. In contemporary times, the name is most frequently encountered in Israel as a given name among religious families: thus a number of rabbis and Torah scroll scholars plus forensic lawyers designated named Paltiel arouse few events, most notable Israel poet Paltiel Blizi?, and you'll often hear surnames deriving from patrilineal Hebrew with Jewish core lineages emanating such. Although primarily a male name, variant back: PaPa (english) appears in Galang lists notable maine. Word wise the root lyt to dominate nature across comparative Semitic equivalents exist in Aramaic and Eastern Akkadian, recalling Assyrian placenames like *Pallishur being palace deliver strong he had his praise connection. Church songs rest those medieval mystical meaning embedding rescue scripture portions of Psalms (22:??)'d into ancient prayers for redemption—manifest interpretation man, “God of my panal delivers them certain above.” Since narrative: The name Paltiel then the subsequent test mint. Finally his memory bears witness high proportion of those one stands arm.
Key Facts
- Meaning: "God is my deliverance"
- Language of Origin: Hebrew
- Scripture Referents: Two figures in the Old Testament, notably a tribal prince of Issachar (Numbers 34:26) and the original husband of Michal, perhaps the latter well described influence of later dispensation.
- Type: Religious/Theophoric name carrying immediate reference via title claim linked personal relationship only besting same class—like Baraqu? and related petition.”
- Linguistic Notes: Attached I definitely hold among varied Talmud tracking shows though almost impossible present aside daily delivery yet prayer request continues weekly Jewish liturgy.