PUNYCODEX

Extended Lore

קַיִן Qāyīn

Etymology · Phonology · Orthography · Cultural Legacy · Primary Sources

Tier 2 Qāyīn.com
Qāyīn — First Murderer
01

Quick Facts

Essential information about Qāyīn, First Murderer

Original Scriptקַיִן
Unicode RestorationQāyīn
Reconstructed Pronunciation/qaˈjiːn/
PantheonCanaanite
DomainFirst Murderer
MeaningFirst son of Adam and Eve
ClassificationTier 2
Primary DomainQāyīn.com
Sacred SymbolsPlowshare, Blood, The mark, City walls, Bronze and iron tools
02

Etymology & Word Family

From original script to Unicode restoration

Original Script קַיִן Qāyīn — "First son of Adam and Eve"
Unicode Restoration Qāyīn Restored stress, length, and script
Modern ASCII qayin Plain-ASCII fallback

BHS points the name קַיִן (Genesis 4:1). The first vowel is a short patah [a] in the Masoretic pointing, although the qāṭīl-pattern form historically had a long *ā (reflected in the PUNYCODEX macron convention Qāyīn); the second vowel is a long hireq-yod [iː]. The qof is a uvular [q], distinct from kaf. HALOT s.v. קַיִן; TDOT s.v. Cain.

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Unicode Character Breakdown

Character-by-character philological analysis

CharacterUnicodeNameBlockPhonetic Role
QU+0051Latin Capital Letter QBasic LatinSame, capitalized
āU+0101Latin Small Letter A with MacronLatin Extended-AMacron: long vowel
yU+0079Latin Small Letter YBasic LatinSame
īU+012BLatin Small Letter I with MacronLatin Extended-AMacron: long vowel
nU+006ELatin Small Letter NBasic LatinSame

The Tier 2 classification reflects which ancient features stress, length, or script are preserved in this restoration.

04

Cultural Significance

From ancient cult to modern Unicode

Ancient Domain

Qāyīn is the first child of the first couple and the first human to shatter the world he was born into. A tiller of soil, he brings the fruit of his labor to God and sees it rejected while his brother's offering is accepted. The rejection does not merely disappoint him; it unlocks something ancient and violent. His story is the Bible's first meditation on envy, anger, and the blood that cries out from the ground.

Qāyīn in Later Traditions

The Qur'an tells the story of Qābīl and Hābīl, offering a more explicit motive — Cain threatens to kill Abel because God accepts only Abel's sacrifice — and making Abel the first prophet-martyr. Gnostic traditions, especially the Cainites, reversed the biblical valuation and celebrated Cain as the one who resisted the creator god. Medieval Jewish legend filled in the silences of Genesis: Cain grew a horn, the mark was a letter of the divine name, and he was eventually killed by the blind Lamech. John Milton gave him a Romantic afterlife in Paradise Lost, while Lord Byron made him a rebel against an unjust heaven. Across cultures, Cain is the figure who forces us to ask why violence begins and how it can be stopped.

Modern Legacy

Qāyīn and his brother have become the archetype of fratricide — every killing of brother by brother carries their names. The 'mark of Cain' has been misunderstood as a sign of racial blackness and used to justify slavery and racism, though the text gives no hint of ethnicity. In literature, Cain appears as the first rebel, the first exile, the first city-builder, and the first artist of violence. Psychologically, the 'Cain complex' names the rivalry between siblings that can turn deadly. The story's central question — 'Am I my brother's keeper?' — remains a test for every society.

Unicode Restoration as Cultural Act

Restoring Qāyīn in a domain name is more than orthographic accuracy. It is a statement that the internet should recognize the full range of human writing — not only the ASCII keyboard.

05

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Qāyīn, First Murderer, and Unicode restoration

01How do you pronounce Qāyīn?

In reconstructed pronunciation, Qāyīn is /qaˈjiːn/ — approximately 'kah-YEEN' — the first consonant is a deep 'k' made at the back of the throat (like Arabic qāf); the second syllable is a long 'yeen'..

02What does Qāyīn mean?

Qāyīn means First son of Adam and Eve in the canaanite tradition.

03What are the symbols of Qāyīn?

Qāyīn is associated with Plowshare (His identity as a worker of the soil, later ironically turned to violence), Blood (The blood of Abel that cries out from the ground and cannot be silenced), The mark (A protective sign whose exact nature is never described; later imagined as a horn, a letter, or a visible stigma), City walls (Enoch, the first city, built by an outcast as a refuge against the world he has wounded), Bronze and iron tools (Through his descendants Tubal-cain and others, Cain becomes associated with the crafts of metalwork).

04Why restore Qāyīn in Unicode?

Plain ASCII qayin strips the stress, length, and script that make the name specific. Unicode restoration returns the name to its original written dignity.

05What is the most important myth about Qāyīn?

Cain brings an offering of the fruit of the ground; Abel brings the firstlings of his flock and their fat portions. The LORD has regard for Abel and his offering, but not for Cain. God warns Cain that sin is crouching at the door, desiring him, and urges him to master it. The warning is personal and immediate; Cain does not master it.

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Scholarly Sources

The philological foundations of this restoration

Every claim on this page is grounded in established scholarship. The orthographic restorations follow disciplinary convention. The etymological chain follows the best available reference works. This is not invention — it is resurrection through scholarship.

Lexicography & Philology

  • Abraham

Primary Texts

  • The Ugaritic Baal Cycle; ritual texts from Ugarit and Phoenician inscriptions.

Archaeology & Art History

  • Material evidence — iconography, inscriptions, and temple archaeology — for Qāyīn and related cults.
  • No archaeological evidence links to the individual Cain, whose story belongs to the primeval history of Genesis rather than to datable history. The narrative does reflect the broader transition to agricultural and pastoral lifeways in the ancient Levant during the Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods. Early settled communities, metallurgy, and the tension between farmers and herders are all part of the material backdrop against which the story was told.

Religious Studies

  • HALOT s.v. קַיִן
  • TDOT s.v. Cain
  • Genesis 4
  • Qur'an, Surah 5:27–31
  • Milton, Paradise Lost, Books 11–12
  • Byron, Cain
Return

The Surface Awaits

You have traced the name from its earliest attestation to its Unicode restoration. Now return to the myth. The story is where the name lives.

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