Patriarch
(father of a tribe), the name given to the head of a family or tribe in Old Testament times. In common usage the title of
patriarch is assigned especially to those whose lives are recorded in Scripture previous to the time of Moses, as Adam, Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob. (“In the early history of the Hebrews we find the ancestor or father of a family retaining authority over
his children and his children’s children so long as he lived, whatever new connections they might form when the father died
the branch families did not break off and form new communities, but usually united under another common head. The eldest son
was generally invested with this dignity. His authority was paternal. He was honored as central point of connection and as
the representative of the whole kindred. Thus each great family had its patriarch or head, and each tribe its prince, selected
from the several heads of the families which it embraced.”—McClintock and Strong.) (“After the destruction of Jerusalem, patriarch
was the title of the chief religious rulers of the Jews in Asia and in early Christian times it became the designation of
the bishops of Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem.”—American Cyclopedia .)