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High Priest of Israel under King Ahaz From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Uriah (Hebrew: אוריה הכהן, romanized: ʾŪrīyyā haKōhēn), in the Book of Kings, was a High Priest of Israel who served during the reign of Ahaz.
According to the Seder Olam Zutta, Uriah is identified as a high priest who was not from the line of Zadok priests.[1] As per the same attribution, Uriah was the son of Yotam, and Uriah's son, heir to the high priesthood, was Hosaiah.[2] Metzudat David identify Uriah with Amarya (II) in the line of priests of the sons of Zadok,[3] and list Uriah's father as Azariah, and list him as having a son name Ahituv.[4]
He is referred to as "Urias" by Josephus,[5] and as "Urijah" by the Seder Olam Zutta.
In 738 BC, according to Ibn Ezra[6] and the Citadels,[7] Uriah signed Isaiah's prophecy as a faithful witness, assumably because of his perceived righteousness[8] (the Sages identify the Uriah in Isaiah with Uriah the prophet).[9] That same year, Aha ordered him to build an altar in the Temple in the pattern of the altar he had seen in Damascus. Uriah supervised the construction, so that when Ahaz returned from Damascus to Jerusalem, the altar was complete. He commanded Uriah to make all the sacrifices on the new altar, and Uriah did so during his tenure as High Priest.[10]
Rabbi Isaac Luria identifies Uriah having been buried close to Har Meron, a place that is now located in the Baal Shem Tov Forest, about 100 meters east of the grave of רב ייבא סבא .[11] It is unclear which Uriah Luria was talking about, and some say it was Uriah the prophet's grave that is located in the forest, and not the grave of the high priest.[12]
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