Talut

Servant of Allah in the Quran identified with king Saul of ancient Israel


title: "Talut" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["kings-of-ancient-israel", "people-of-the-quran", "hebrew-bible-people-in-islam", "saul"] description: "Servant of Allah in the Quran identified with king Saul of ancient Israel" topic_path: "geography/israel" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talut" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Servant of Allah in the Quran identified with king Saul of ancient Israel ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox royalty"]

FieldValue
nameTalut
image[[File:Talut.png
titleMalik Banī Isrā'īl
()
successionKing of Israel
reign1037 BCE – 1010 BCE
predecessorPosition established
successorDawud
religionIslam
native_lang1English
native_lang1_name1Saul (according to Muslim tradition)
native_lang2Arabic
native_lang2_name1طالوت
::

| name = Talut | image = [[File:Talut.png|150px]] | caption = | title = Malik Banī Isrā'īl () | succession = King of Israel | reign = 1037 BCE – 1010 BCE | predecessor = Position established | successor = Dawud | religion = Islam | native_lang1 = English | native_lang1_name1 = Saul (according to Muslim tradition) | native_lang2 = Arabic | native_lang2_name1 = طالوت

Talut () is a divinely appointed king mentioned in the Qurʾān traditionally identified with the Israelite king Saul, as he is stated to be the Malik () of Israelites.

Name

The name Talut (طالوت) has an uncertain etymology. Unlike most other figures found in both the Hebrew Bible and the Quran, the Arabic name is not similar to the Hebrew name (). According to Muslim exegetes, Ṭālūt means "tall" and refers to the extraordinary stature of Saul, which would be consistent with the Biblical account. In explanation of the name, exegetes such as the 11th-century scholar ʾAbu ʾIsḥāq Aṯ-Ṯaʿlabī hold that at this time, the future king of Israel was to be recognized by his height; Samuel set up a measure, but no person in Israel reached the sufficient height except for Saul. The name is also similar to the name of Goliath () in the Quran.

Narrative in the Quran

After the time of Musa (Moses), the Israelites began to demand a king to lead them into war against their enemies. Consequently, Talut was appointed king by prophet Samuel of the Children of Israel who announced that God had chosen Talut as the new king of Israel. The Israelites questioned the prophet's decision, lacking respect for Talut due to his lack of wealth. The prophet then told them that Talut was more favoured than they were. He was distinguished from the rest by his great knowledge and by his physique. A sign of his rightful role as king was that God had brought back the Ark of the Covenant to Israel for the Israelites. Talut tested his people at a river: whoever drank from it would not follow him in battle excepting one who took from it a handful. Many of them drank, but only the faithful ventured on. Talut then led the Israelites to victory over the army of Goliath, who was killed by Dawud (David). Talut is not considered to be a prophet () of God, but rather a divinely-appointed king.

Hadith

Talut is also mentioned in a hadith (): "Narrated Al-Barāʾ: The companions of Muhammad, who took part in Badr, told me that their number was that of Talut's companions who crossed the river (of Jordan) with him, and they were over three-hundred-and-ten men. By God, none crossed the river with him, but a believer."

References

References

  1. [[M. A. S. Abdel Haleem]]: ''The Qur'an, a new translation'', note to 2:247.
  2. Leaman, Oliver, ''The Quran, An Encyclopedia'', 2006, p.638.
  3. {{qref. 2. 246-252
  4. Bukhari: Book 5: Volume 59: Hadith 293: Military Expeditions led by the Prophet (Al-Maghaazi).

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kings-of-ancient-israelpeople-of-the-quranhebrew-bible-people-in-islamsaul