complete verse (Esther 1:22)

Following are a number of back-translations as well as a sample translation for translators of Esther 1:22:

  • Kupsabiny: “Right away, the king sent that message to reach all the provinces of his empire/land. Every community received a letter written in its language in a different writing. Those letters said like this, ‘The husband of the home is great in his home.’” (Source: Kupsabiny Back Translation)
  • Newari: “After that [each] husband would be master of his own house, and all members of the household would have to obey his commands. The great king wrote the command to the speakers of various languages each in their own language and script.” (Source: Newari Back Translation)
  • Hiligaynon: “He sent letters to all the provinces which are under-the-jurisdiction of his kingdom, according to their language. And it was-written/[lit. was-spoken] in this letter that every husband was the one-who-should rule-over his family.” (Source: Hiligaynon Back Translation)
  • Eastern Bru: “Then the king wrote and sent to every country that he ruled. He wrote following the wiring and the language the people spoke in all those countries, "Every husband must be in charge in of his own family; and his word has full authority."” (Source: Bru Back Translation)
  • English: “Then he sent letters to all the provinces, stating that all men should have complete authority over their wives and their children. He wrote the letters in every language and type of writing/alphabet that was used in each province.” (Source: Translation for Translators)

Translation commentary on Esther 1:22   

He sent letters: Parola Del Signore: La Bibbia in Lingua Corrente supplies the implicit information that the decree was “translated,” that is, “The king had a decree prepared and sent it to every province, translated into the language of every people and written in the local script.” Translators may find this a helpful model in their own language.

All the royal provinces, that is, the 127 provinces (see 1.1).

Every province and every people: the Hebrew uses an idiom that is literally “to province and province … to people and people.” Many languages will have similar idioms that show that every province and people was included, one after the other, with none omitted.

In its own script … in its own language: in the vast Persian Empire, many languages were spoken. The main languages were various dialects of Persian, Elamite, Babylonian, Aramaic, Phoenician, Egyptian, and Greek; and each of these languages had a different script. Letters and other written documents were sent in the various languages spoken in the Empire, using the script of each language, that is, the letters were written in the “way [or, manner]” of each language (see also 3.12; 8.9).

The intention of the king’s decree was that every man be lord in his own house. Although most versions use a noun, to be lord, “master” (Good News Translation), or “ruler” (New International Version), some languages may prefer to follow the pattern of the Hebrew, which uses a participle, “ruling,” from the verb “to rule, to be master.” House may be translated as “home” (Good News Translation), “foyer,” or “concession,” depending on cultural context, making it clear that the authority of the husband is not to be exercised merely within the walls of a house, but rather within the social unit which is the family.

The words speak according to the language of his people present a problem both of text and of interpretation. The three words that appear in the Hebrew are absent from the Septuagint. New Revised Standard Version, New American Bible, New Jerusalem Bible, Nueva Biblia Española, and Die Bibel im heutigen Deutsch follow the Greek text in omitting these words. Hebrew Old Testament Text Project considers the reading of the Septuagint to be a scribal change of the Hebrew text in an attempt to make sense of a difficult text. Of those translations that follow the Hebrew, some translate literally, as Revised Standard Version and Traduction œcuménique de la Bible, while others such as Good News Translation translate the supposed meaning. Probably the sense is that a husband should speak his mother tongue in his home, and not the language of his foreign wife (see Neh 13.23-24). This may mean that he should show his authority over his wife by imposing his language in the home (Bible en français courant: “impose the use of his maternal language there”; so also Parola Del Signore: La Bibbia in Lingua Corrente, Parola Del Signore: La Bibbia in Lingua Corrente). However, according to Revised English Bible, the sense is not that the husband should show his authority by imposing his mother tongue, but rather that “each man, whatever language he spoke, should be master in his own home.” The translations of Biblia Dios Habla Hoy, An American Translation, and Anchor Bible are based on a slight change in the Hebrew text: “should speak whatever seemed proper to him.” The New English Bible translation rests on yet a different alteration of the Hebrew text: “and control all his own womenfolk.”

Hebrew Old Testament Text Project rejects translations based on changes in the Hebrew text with no support by any manuscripts. The recommendation of Hebrew Old Testament Text Project is that the words “and speaking according to the language of his people” be understood, not as part of the content of the king’s decree, but rather as stating the manner in which the king’s command is to be carried out by those officials who deliver the decree. Hebrew Old Testament Text Project gives a “B” evaluation to the Hebrew text, indicating some doubt as to whether this is the correct text (compare Septuagint and footnote in Traduction œcuménique de la Bible and Bible en français courant).

The diversity of interpretations and translations of these final three words makes it difficult to recommend any one of them, but either the solution followed by Bible en français courant or that proposed by Hebrew Old Testament Text Project seems preferable. The New International Version translation agrees with the Hebrew Old Testament Text Project recommendation: “He sent dispatches to all parts of his kingdom, to each province in its own script and to each people in its own language, proclaiming in each people’s tongue that every man should be ruler over his own household” (New International Version).

Quoted with permission from Omanson, Roger L. and Noss, Philip A. A Handbook on Esther (The Hebrew Text). (UBS Helps for Translators). New York: UBS, 1997. For this and other handbooks for translators see here .

SIL Translator’s Notes on Esther 1:22

1:22a

letters: This means written messages, which would have been taken by messengers throughout the kingdom.

1:22b

script: This means the alphabet people used to write their language. For example, if you write Hebrew, you use a different script from English.

1:22c

in their own language: This phrase is at the end of the verse in Hebrew and is literally “and speaking according to the language of his people.” Commentators and translators have found it difficult to understand this phrase and have many different solutions. Some of the possibilities are:

(1) It is referring again to the language in which the message was to be written and announced (Berean Standard Bible, New International Version, New Living Translation (2004)).

(2) The LXX (Greek OT) omitted the phrase completely and some English versions do the same (New Jerusalem Bible, New Revised Standard Version, Contemporary English Version, New Century Version).

(3) The husband should speak with final authority (Good News Translation).

You may want to follow the interpretation of the major national translation in your area. The Display follows the first interpretation.

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