![]() Azeez's wife declares her purpose to imprison Joseph unless he yields to her solicitations. Seeing Joseph's beauty, the wives of other noblemen call him an angel. The sin of Azeez's wife becomes known in the city ( Q12:30). Azeez believes Joseph and condemns his wife. ![]() The rent in his garment testifies to Joseph's innocence. She accuses Joseph of an attempt to dishonor her. The Egyptian's wife endeavors to seduce Joseph, but he is preserved from her enticements. The story is first related in Quran 12:21–35: An Egyptian purchases Joseph and proposes to adopt him. According to the documentary hypothesis, the story of Potiphar and his wife is credited to the Yahwist source and stands in the same place that the stories of the butler and the baker and Pharaoh's dreams stand in the Elohist text. The Torah in which the story appears (see also the Bible and the Quran) was the earliest written of the three: c. According to the Jewish calendar, Joseph was purchased in the year 2216, which is 1544 BC, at the end of the Second Intermediate Period or the very beginning of the New Kingdom. Tying Potiphar or Joseph accurately to a particular pharaoh or period is difficult. ![]() Persian miniatures often illustrate Yusuf and Zulaikha in Jami's Haft Awrang ("Seven thrones"). The story became prevalent in Western art during the Renaissance and Baroque periods, usually depicting the moment when Joseph tears himself away from the bed containing a more-or-less naked figure of Potiphar's wife. The medieval Sefer HaYashar, a commentary on the Torah, gives Potiphar's wife's name as Zuleikha, as do many Islamic traditions - thus the Persian poem called Yusuf and Zulaikha from Jami's Haft Awrang "Seven thrones". The false accusation by Potiphar's wife plays an important role in Joseph's narrative because had he not been imprisoned, he would not have met the fellow prisoner who introduced him to Pharaoh. What happened to Potiphar after that is unclear some sources identify him as Potipherah, an Egyptian priest whose daughter, Asenath, marries Joseph. When Joseph refused her advances and ran off, leaving his outer vestment in her hands, she retaliated by falsely accusing him of trying to rape her, and Potiphar had Joseph imprisoned. Potiphar's wife, who was known for her infidelities, took a liking to Joseph and attempted to seduce him. Potiphar is the captain of the Egyptian king's guard who is said to have purchased Joseph as a slave and, impressed by his intelligence, makes him the master of his household. His name possibly indicates the same figure as Potiphera (Hebrew: פוטיפרע). Potiphar ( / ˈ p ɒ t ɪ f ər/ POT-if-ər Hebrew: פּוֹטִיפַר/פּוֹטִיפָר, Modern: Pōṭīfar, Tiberian: Pōṭīp̄ar/Pōṭīp̄ār from Late Egyptian: pꜣ-dj-pꜣ-rꜥ, lit.'he whom Ra gave' ) is a figure in the Hebrew Bible and the Quran.
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