Anonymous

Difference between revisions of "Bashan"

From BiblePortal Wikipedia
250 bytes added ,  12:40, 13 October 2021
no edit summary
Line 9: Line 9:
          
          
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_65044" /> ==
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_65044" /> ==
<p> Now best known for the Golan Heights, it is a large district on the east of the Jordan, having Gilead on the south and extending northward to Mount Hermon; westward to the Jordan valley, and eastward nearly as far as 37 E. It is sometimes called the "land of Bashan," and it was the kingdom of Og the Amorite. It was conquered by Moses, and became, with part of Gilead, the portion of the half-tribe of Manasseh. Its principal cities were Ashtaroth (or Beeshterah) given to the Levites, Golan a 'city of refuge,' Edrei, and [[Salcah]] on its border. It was ravaged by Hazael in the time of Jehu, and is not often alluded to in the later history of the kings of Judah and Israel. &nbsp;Joshua 13:30,31; &nbsp;Joshua 21:27; &nbsp;2 Kings 10:33; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:11 . </p> <p> The district was in later days divided into </p> <p> 1. GAULANITIS on the west, now called <i> Jaulan </i> , a rich district with noble forests. </p> <p> 2. AURANITIS, in the centre, now called <i> Hauran </i> , a magnificent plain. </p> <p> 3. TRACHONITIS, on the north-east, also called ARGOB, <i> q.v.; </i> now called <i> El </i> <i> Lejah, </i> a wild district of basaltic rocks. </p> <p> 4. BATANAEA, on the south-east, now called <i> Ard el Bathanyeh. </i> The four districts have relics of a numerous population, with massive houses built of stone in some parts. </p> <p> THE OAKS OF BASHAN are used symbolically for great strength and loftiness, which God in His judgement brings down. &nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6;&nbsp;Zechariah 11:2 . </p> <p> [[Bulls]] OF BASHAN are figurative of strong ruthless enemies, &nbsp;Amos 4:1 , whom God in the coming judgement on [[Gog]] will crush, and will call for the fowls and the beasts to come and feed upon their flesh and their blood, &nbsp;Ezekiel 39:18 : and lastly, when the blessed Lord was on the cross, His description of His vindictive enemies includes the strong bulls of Bashan which beset Him around, and gaped upon Him with their mouths, as a ravening and a roaring lion. &nbsp;Psalm 22:12,13 . </p>
<p> Now best known for the Golan Heights, it is a large district on the east of the Jordan, having Gilead on the south and extending northward to Mount Hermon; westward to the Jordan valley, and eastward nearly as far as 37 E. It is sometimes called the "land of Bashan," and it was the kingdom of Og the Amorite. It was conquered by Moses, and became, with part of Gilead, the portion of the half-tribe of Manasseh. Its principal cities were Ashtaroth (or Beeshterah) given to the Levites, Golan a 'city of refuge,' Edrei, and [[Salcah]] on its border. It was ravaged by Hazael in the time of Jehu, and is not often alluded to in the later history of the kings of Judah and Israel. &nbsp;Joshua 13:30,31; &nbsp;Joshua 21:27; &nbsp;2 Kings 10:33; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:11 . </p> <p> The district was in later days divided into </p> <p> 1. GAULANITIS on the west, now called <i> Jaulan </i> , a rich district with noble forests. </p> <p> 2. AURANITIS, in the centre, now called <i> Hauran </i> , a magnificent plain. </p> <p> 3. TRACHONITIS, on the north-east, also called ARGOB, <i> q.v.; </i> now called <i> El </i> <i> Lejah, </i> a wild district of basaltic rocks. </p> <p> 4. BATANAEA, on the south-east, now called <i> Ard el Bathanyeh. </i> The four districts have relics of a numerous population, with massive houses built of stone in some parts. </p> <p> [[The Oaks Of Bashan]]  are used symbolically for great strength and loftiness, which God in His judgement brings down. &nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6;&nbsp;Zechariah 11:2 . </p> <p> [[Bulls Of Bashan]] are figurative of strong ruthless enemies, &nbsp;Amos 4:1 , whom God in the coming judgement on [[Gog]] will crush, and will call for the fowls and the beasts to come and feed upon their flesh and their blood, &nbsp;Ezekiel 39:18 : and lastly, when the blessed Lord was on the cross, His description of His vindictive enemies includes the strong bulls of Bashan which beset Him around, and gaped upon Him with their mouths, as a ravening and a roaring lion. &nbsp;Psalm 22:12,13 . </p>
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_49853" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_49853" /> ==
<p> <strong> BASHAN </strong> . The name of the territory east of the Sea of Tiberias. It was the kingdom of Og, the Rephaite opponent of Israel, and with his name the country is almost invariably associated (&nbsp; Numbers 21:33 , &nbsp; Deuteronomy 29:7 , &nbsp; Nehemiah 9:22 etc.). The territory was given to the half-tribe of Manasseh, with a reservation of two cities, Golan and Be-eshterah (Ashtaroth in &nbsp; 1 Chronicles 6:71 ), for the [[Gershonite]] [[Levites]] (&nbsp; Joshua 21:27 ). In the time of [[Jehu]] the country was smitten by Hazael (&nbsp; 2 Kings 10:33 ). It was noted for mountains (&nbsp; Psalms 68:15 ), lions (&nbsp; Deuteronomy 33:22 ), oak trees (&nbsp; Isaiah 2:13 , &nbsp; Ezekiel 27:6 , &nbsp; Zechariah 11:2 ), and especially cattle, both rams (&nbsp; Deuteronomy 32:14 ) and bullocks (&nbsp; Ezekiel 39:18 ); the bulls and kine of Bashan are typical of cruelty and oppression (&nbsp; Psalms 22:12 , &nbsp; Amos 4:1 ). The extent of the territory denoted by this name cannot be exactly defined till some important identifications can be established, such as the exact meaning of ‘the region of Argob’ (included in the kingdom of Og, &nbsp; Deuteronomy 3:4 etc.), where were threescore great cities with walls and brazen bars, administered for Solomon by Ben-geber of Ramoth-gilead (&nbsp; 1 Kings 4:13 ). It included [[Salecah]] ( <em> Salkhat </em> , on the borders of the desert), Edrei ( <em> ed-Der‘a </em> ?), Ashtaroth (perhaps <em> Tell Ashareh </em> ), and Golan, one of the cities of refuge, the name of which may be preserved in the <em> Jaulan </em> , the region immediately east of the Sea of Tiberias. </p> <p> R. A. S. Macalister. </p>
<p> <strong> BASHAN </strong> . The name of the territory east of the Sea of Tiberias. It was the kingdom of Og, the Rephaite opponent of Israel, and with his name the country is almost invariably associated (&nbsp; Numbers 21:33 , &nbsp; Deuteronomy 29:7 , &nbsp; Nehemiah 9:22 etc.). The territory was given to the half-tribe of Manasseh, with a reservation of two cities, Golan and Be-eshterah (Ashtaroth in &nbsp; 1 Chronicles 6:71 ), for the [[Gershonite]] [[Levites]] (&nbsp; Joshua 21:27 ). In the time of [[Jehu]] the country was smitten by Hazael (&nbsp; 2 Kings 10:33 ). It was noted for mountains (&nbsp; Psalms 68:15 ), lions (&nbsp; Deuteronomy 33:22 ), oak trees (&nbsp; Isaiah 2:13 , &nbsp; Ezekiel 27:6 , &nbsp; Zechariah 11:2 ), and especially cattle, both rams (&nbsp; Deuteronomy 32:14 ) and bullocks (&nbsp; Ezekiel 39:18 ); the bulls and kine of Bashan are typical of cruelty and oppression (&nbsp; Psalms 22:12 , &nbsp; Amos 4:1 ). The extent of the territory denoted by this name cannot be exactly defined till some important identifications can be established, such as the exact meaning of ‘the region of Argob’ (included in the kingdom of Og, &nbsp; Deuteronomy 3:4 etc.), where were threescore great cities with walls and brazen bars, administered for Solomon by Ben-geber of Ramoth-gilead (&nbsp; 1 Kings 4:13 ). It included [[Salecah]] ( <em> Salkhat </em> , on the borders of the desert), Edrei ( <em> ed-Der‘a </em> ?), Ashtaroth (perhaps <em> Tell Ashareh </em> ), and Golan, one of the cities of refuge, the name of which may be preserved in the <em> Jaulan </em> , the region immediately east of the Sea of Tiberias. </p> <p> [[R. A. S]]  Macalister. </p>
          
          
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_69726" /> ==
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_69726" /> ==
<p> [[Bashan]] (''Bâ'Shan'' ), ''Light Sandy Soil.'' A district reaching from Hermon to Gilead at the river Arnon, and from the Jordan valley eastward to Salcah. It is referred to about 60 times in the Bible. Bashan has two ranges of mountains, one along the Jordan valley, about 3000 feet high, another irregular range on the east side of the district; between them are plains or undulating tableland watered by springs. The rock of basalt on the west is broken into deep chasms and jagged projections; the hills are covered with oak forests, as in former times. &nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6; &nbsp;Zechariah 11:2. The plain of the Jaulan (Golan of Scripture) is a vast field of powdered lava and basalt, a fertile pasture to this day. The northeastern portion of Bashan, including the Argob of Scripture, is a wild mass of basaltic rock. The centre of Bashan was mostly a fertile plain, and was regarded as the richest in Syria. The early people of Bashan were the giants Rephaim. &nbsp;Genesis 14:5. Og, its king, was defeated and slain by Israel, &nbsp;Numbers 21:33; &nbsp;Numbers 32:33, and the country divided. Its pastures, cattle, sheep, oaks, and forests were famous. &nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:14; &nbsp;Psalms 22:12; &nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Jeremiah 50:19; &nbsp;Ezekiel 39:18. After the captivity it was divided into four provinces. The country is now nominally under Turkish rule, but is really held by tribes of Arabs, dangerous, warlike, and unsubdued. Bashan is almost literally crowded with cities and villages, now in ruins, some supposed to date back to Joshua's conquest, corroborating the account in Scripture. &nbsp;Joshua 13:30. </p>
<p> [[Bashan]] ( ''Bâ'Shan'' ), ''Light Sandy Soil.'' A district reaching from Hermon to Gilead at the river Arnon, and from the Jordan valley eastward to Salcah. It is referred to about 60 times in the Bible. Bashan has two ranges of mountains, one along the Jordan valley, about 3000 feet high, another irregular range on the east side of the district; between them are plains or undulating tableland watered by springs. The rock of basalt on the west is broken into deep chasms and jagged projections; the hills are covered with oak forests, as in former times. &nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6; &nbsp;Zechariah 11:2. The plain of the Jaulan (Golan of Scripture) is a vast field of powdered lava and basalt, a fertile pasture to this day. The northeastern portion of Bashan, including the Argob of Scripture, is a wild mass of basaltic rock. The centre of Bashan was mostly a fertile plain, and was regarded as the richest in Syria. The early people of Bashan were the giants Rephaim. &nbsp;Genesis 14:5. Og, its king, was defeated and slain by Israel, &nbsp;Numbers 21:33; &nbsp;Numbers 32:33, and the country divided. Its pastures, cattle, sheep, oaks, and forests were famous. &nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:14; &nbsp;Psalms 22:12; &nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Jeremiah 50:19; &nbsp;Ezekiel 39:18. After the captivity it was divided into four provinces. The country is now nominally under Turkish rule, but is really held by tribes of Arabs, dangerous, warlike, and unsubdued. Bashan is almost literally crowded with cities and villages, now in ruins, some supposed to date back to Joshua's conquest, corroborating the account in Scripture. &nbsp;Joshua 13:30. </p>
          
          
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_71890" /> ==
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_71890" /> ==
<p> '''Ba'shan.''' ''(Fruitful).'' A district on the east of Jordan. It is sometimes spoken of as the "land of Bashan," &nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:11, and compare &nbsp;Numbers 21:33; &nbsp;Numbers 32:33, and sometimes as "all Bashan." &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:13; &nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;Joshua 13:12; &nbsp;Joshua 13:30. </p> <p> It was taken by the children of Israel, after their conquest of the land of Sihon, from Arnon to Jabbok. The limits of Bashan are very strictly defined. It extended from the "border of Gilead" on the south , to Mount Hermon on the north, &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:3; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:14; &nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:23, and from the Arabah or Jordan valley on the west, to [[Salchah]] (''Sulkhad'' ) and the border of the Geshurites and the [[Maachathites]] on the east. &nbsp;Joshua 12:3-5; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10. </p> <p> This important district was bestowed on the half-tribe of Manasseh, &nbsp;Joshua 13:29-31, together with "half Gilead." This country is now full of interesting ruins, which have lately been explored, and from which, much light has been thrown upon Bible times. See Porter's "Giant Cities of Bashan." </p>
<p> '''Ba'shan.''' ''(Fruitful).'' A district on the east of Jordan. It is sometimes spoken of as the "land of Bashan," &nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:11, and compare &nbsp;Numbers 21:33; &nbsp;Numbers 32:33, and sometimes as "all Bashan." &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:13; &nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;Joshua 13:12; &nbsp;Joshua 13:30. </p> <p> It was taken by the children of Israel, after their conquest of the land of Sihon, from Arnon to Jabbok. The limits of Bashan are very strictly defined. It extended from the "border of Gilead" on the south , to Mount Hermon on the north, &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:3; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:14; &nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:23, and from the Arabah or Jordan valley on the west, to [[Salchah]] ( ''Sulkhad'' ) and the border of the Geshurites and the [[Maachathites]] on the east. &nbsp;Joshua 12:3-5; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10. </p> <p> This important district was bestowed on the half-tribe of Manasseh, &nbsp;Joshua 13:29-31, together with "half Gilead." This country is now full of interesting ruins, which have lately been explored, and from which, much light has been thrown upon Bible times. See Porter's "Giant Cities of Bashan." </p>
          
          
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_15620" /> ==
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_15620" /> ==
Line 24: Line 24:
          
          
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_30543" /> ==
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_30543" /> ==
<li> Batanaea, now Ard-el-Bathanyeh, on the east of the Lejah, with many deserted towns almost as perfect as when they were inhabited. (See Hauran .) <div> <p> '''Copyright Statement''' These dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Third Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. Public Domain. </p> <p> '''Bibliography Information''' Easton, Matthew George. Entry for 'Bashan'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/b/bashan.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
<li> Batanaea, now Ard-el-Bathanyeh, on the east of the Lejah, with many deserted towns almost as perfect as when they were inhabited. (See Hauran .) <div> <p> '''Copyright Statement''' These dictionary topics are from M.G. Easton [[M.A., DD]]  Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Third Edition, published by [[Thomas]] Nelson, 1897. Public Domain. </p> <p> '''Bibliography Information''' Easton, Matthew George. Entry for 'Bashan'. Easton's Bible Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/eng/ebd/b/bashan.html. 1897. </p> </div> </li>
          
          
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_38875" /> ==
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_38875" /> ==
Line 33: Line 33:
          
          
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_23214" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_23214" /> ==
<p> (Heb. Bashan', בָּשָׁן, usually with the art., הִבָּשָׁן, [[Light]] sandy ''Soil;'' [[Samaritan]] Ver. בתנין; Targ. בּוּתְנָן, &nbsp;Psalms 68:13, also מִתְנָן; the latter, [[Buxtorf]] [''Lex. Talm.'' col. 370] suggests, may have originated in the mistake of a transcriber, yet both are found in Targ. Jon., &nbsp;Deuteronomy 33:22; Sept. Βασάν and Βασανῖτις, Josephus,[Ant. 9:8] and [[Eusebius]] [Onomast. s.v.] Βαταναία )'','' a district on the east of Jordan, the modern el-Bottein or el-Betheneyeh (Abulfeda, Tab. Syr. p. 97). It is not, like Argob and other districts of Palestine, distinguished by one designation, but is sometimes spoken of as the "land of Bashan" (&nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:11;. and comp. &nbsp;Numbers 21:33; &nbsp;Numbers 32:33); and sometimes as "all Bashan" (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:13; &nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;Joshua 13:12; &nbsp;Joshua 13:30), but most commonly without any addition. The word probably denotes the peculiar fertility of the soil; by the ancient versions, instead of using it as a proper name, a word meaning ''Fruitful Or Fat'' is adopted. Thus, in &nbsp;Psalms 22:13, for ''Bashan,'' we find in Sept. πίονες; Aquila, λιπαροί; Symmachus, σιτιστοί; and Vulg. ''Pingues'' (Psalm 67:16), for ''Hill Of Bashan;'' Sept. ὄρος πῖον; [[Jerome]] (see Bochart, ''Hierozoicon,'' pt. 1, col. 531), ''Mons Pinguis.'' The richness of the pasture-land of Bashan, and the consequent superiority of its breed of cattle, are frequently alluded to in the Scriptures. We read in &nbsp;Deuteronomy 22:14, of "rams of the breed (Heb. ''Sons'' ) of Bashan." (&nbsp;Ezekiel 39:18), "Rams, lambs, bulls, goats, all of them fatlings of Bashan." The oaks of Bashan are mentioned in connection with the cedars of [[Lebanon]] (&nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Zechariah 11:2). In Ezekiel's description of the wealth and magnificence of Tyre it is said, "Of the oaks of Bashan have they made their oars" (&nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6). The ancient commentators on &nbsp;Amos 4:1, "the kine of Bashan," Jerome, Theodoret, and Cyril, speak in the strongest terms of the exuberant fertility of Bashan (Bochart, ''Hierozoicon,'' pt. 1, col. 306), and modern travelers corroborate their assertions. See Burckhardt's ''Travels In Syria,'' p. 286-288; Buckingham's ''Travels In Palest.'' 2:112-117. </p> <p> The first notice of this country is in &nbsp;Genesis 14:5. [[Chedorlaomer]] and his confederates "smote the [[Rephaims]] in Ashtaroth Karnaim." Now Og, king of Bashan, dwelt in Ashtaroth, and "was of the remnant of the Rephaim" (Auth. Vers. "giants"), &nbsp;Joshua 12:4. When the [[Israelites]] invaded the [[Promised]] Land, Argob, a province of Bashan, contained "sixty fenced cities, with walls, and gates, and brazen bars, besides unwalled towns a great many" (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:4-5; &nbsp;1 Kings 4:13). All these were taken by the children of Israel after their conquest of the land of [[Sihon]] from Arnon to Jabbok. They "turned" from their road over Jordan and "went up by the way of Bashan" — probably very much the same as that now followed by the pilgrims of the Haj route and by the Romans before them — to Edrei, on the western edge of the Lejah. See EDREI Here they encountered Og, king of Bashan, who "came out" probably from the natural fastnesses of Argob only to meet the entire destruction of himself, his sons, and all his people (&nbsp;Numbers 21:33-35; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:1-3). Argob, with its 60 strongly fortified cities, evidently formed a principal portion of Bashan (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:4-5), though still only a portion (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:13), there being besides a large number of unwalled towns (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:5). Its chief cities were Ashtaroth (i.e. Beeshterah, comp. &nbsp;Joshua 21:27 with &nbsp;1 Chronicles 6:71), Edrei, Golan, Salcah, and possibly Mahanaim (&nbsp;Joshua 13:30). Two of these cities, viz. Golan and Beeshterah, were allotted to the Levites of the family of Gershom, the former as a "city of refuge" (&nbsp;Joshua 21:27; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 6:71). The important district was bestowed on the half tribe of Manasseh (&nbsp;Joshua 13:29-31), together with "half Gilead." After the [[Manassites]] had assisted their brethren in the conquest of the country west of the Jordan, they went to their tents and to their cattle in the possession which Moses had given them in Bashan (&nbsp;Joshua 22:7-8). It is doubtful, however, whether the limits of this tribe ever extended over the whole of this region. (See Manasseh). </p> <p> Solomon appointed twelve officers to furnish the monthly supplies for the royal household, and allotted the region of Argob to the son of [[Geber]] (&nbsp;1 Kings 4:13). Toward the close of Jehu's reign, Hazael invaded the land of Israel, and smote the whole eastern territory, "even Gilead and Bashan" (&nbsp;2 Kings 10:33; Joseph. ''Ant.'' 9:8, 1); but after his death the cities he had taken were recovered by [[Jehoash]] (Joash) (&nbsp;2 Kings 13:25), who defeated the [[Syrians]] in three battles, as [[Elisha]] had predicted (&nbsp;2 Kings 13:19; Joseph. Ant. 9:8, 7). After this date, although the "oaks" of its forests and the wild cattle of its pastures — the "strong bulls of Bashan" — long retained their proverbial fame (&nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6; &nbsp;Psalms 22:12), and the beauty of its high downs and wide-sweeping plains could not but strike now and then the heart of a poet (&nbsp;Amos 4:1; &nbsp;Psalms 68:15; &nbsp;Jeremiah 50:19; &nbsp;Micah 7:14), yet the country almost disappears from history; its very name seems to have given place as quickly as possible to one which had a connection with the story of the founder of the nation (&nbsp;Genesis 31:47-48), and therefore more claim to use. Even so early as the time of the conquest, "Gilead" seems to have begun to take the first place as the designation of the country beyond the Jordan, a place which it retained afterward to the exclusion of Bashan (comp. &nbsp;Joshua 22:9; &nbsp;Joshua 22:15; &nbsp;Joshua 22:32; &nbsp;Judges 20:1; &nbsp;Psalms 60:7; &nbsp;Psalms 108:8; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 27:21; &nbsp;2 Kings 15:29). Indeed "Bashan" is most frequently used as a mere accompaniment to the name of Og, when his overthrow is alluded to in the national poetry. After the captivity the name Batanaea was applied to only a part of the ancient Bashan; the three remaining sections being called Trachonitis, Auranitis, and Gaulanitis (Lightfoot's Works, 10:282). All these provinces were granted by [[Augustus]] to Herod the Great, and on his death Batanaea formed a part of Philip's tetrarchy (Joseph. War, 2:6, 3; Ant. 18:4, 6). At his decease, A.D. 34, it was annexed by [[Tiberius]] to the province of Syria; but in A.D. 37 it was given by [[Caligula]] to Herod Agrippa, the son of Aristobulus, with the title of king (&nbsp;Acts 12:1; Joseph. ''Ant.'' 18:6, 10). From the time of Agrippa's death, in A.D. 44, to A.D. 53, the government again reverted to the Romans, but it was then restored by [[Claudius]] to [[Agrippa]] II (&nbsp;Acts 25:13; Joseph. ''Ant.'' 20, 7, 1). The ancient limits of Bashan are very strictly defined. It extended from the "border of Gilead" on the south to Mount Hermon on the north (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:3; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:14; &nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:23), and from the Arabah or Jordan valley on the west to Salcah and the border of the Geshurites and the Maacathites on the east (&nbsp;Joshua 12:3-5; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10). The sacred writers include in Bashan that part of the country eastward of the Jordan which was given to half the tribe of Manasseh, situated to the north of Gilead. Bochart incorrectly places it between the rivers Jabbok and Arnon, and speaks of it as the allotment of the tribes of Reuben and [[Gad]] (&nbsp;Numbers 32:33). Of the four post-exilian provinces, Gaulanitis, Auranitis, Trachonitis, and Batanaea, all but the third have retained almost perfectly their ancient names, the modern Lejah alone having superseded the Argob and Trachonitis of the Old and New Testaments. The province of Jaulan is the most western of the four; it abuts on the Sea of [[Galilee]] and the Lake of Merom, from the former of which it rises to a plateau nearly 3000 feet above the surface of the water. This plateau, though now almost wholly uncultivated, is of a rich soil, and its north-west portion rises into a range of hills almost everywhere clothed with oak forests (Porter, 2:259). No less than 127 ruined villages are scattered over its surface. (See Golan). </p> <p> The Hauran is to the southeast of the last named province and south of the Lejah; like Jaulan, its surface is perfectly flat, and its soil esteemed among the most fertile in Syria. It too contains an immense number of ruined towns, and also many inhabited villages. (See Hauran). </p> <p> The contrast which the rocky intricacies of the Lejah present to the rich and flat plains of the Hauran and the Jaulan has already been noticed. (See Argob). </p> <p> The remaining district, though no doubt much smaller in extent than the ancient Bashan, still retains its name, modified by a change frequent in the Oriental languages. ''Ard El-Bataniyeh'' lies on the east of the Lejah and the north of the range of Jebel Hauran or ed-Druze (Porter, 2:57). It is a mountainous district of the most picturesque character, abounding with forests of evergreen oak, and with soil extremely rich; the surface studded with towns of very remote antiquity, deserted, it is true, but yet standing almost as perfect as the day they were built. For the boundaries and characteristics of these provinces, and the most complete researches yet published into this interesting portion of Palestine, see Porter's Damascus, vol. 2; comp. Schwarz, Palest. p. 219; Jour. Sac. Lit. Jan. 1852, p. 363, 364; July, 1854, p. 282 sq.; Porter, [[Giant]] Cities (Lond. 1865). </p>
<p> (Heb. Bashan', '''''בָּשָׁן''''' , usually with the art., '''''הִבָּשָׁן''''' , [[Light]] sandy ''Soil;'' [[Samaritan]] Ver. '''''בתנין''''' ; Targ. '''''בּוּתְנָן''''' , &nbsp;Psalms 68:13, also '''''מִתְנָן''''' ; the latter, [[Buxtorf]] [ ''Lex. Talm.'' col. 370] suggests, may have originated in the mistake of a transcriber, yet both are found in Targ. Jon., &nbsp;Deuteronomy 33:22; Sept. '''''Βασάν''''' and '''''Βασανῖτις''''' , Josephus,[Ant. 9:8] and [[Eusebius]] [Onomast. s.v.] '''''Βαταναία''''' ) '','' a district on the east of Jordan, the modern el-Bottein or el-Betheneyeh (Abulfeda, Tab. Syr. p. 97). It is not, like Argob and other districts of Palestine, distinguished by one designation, but is sometimes spoken of as the "land of Bashan" (&nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:11;. and comp. &nbsp;Numbers 21:33; &nbsp;Numbers 32:33); and sometimes as "all Bashan" (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:13; &nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;Joshua 13:12; &nbsp;Joshua 13:30), but most commonly without any addition. The word probably denotes the peculiar fertility of the soil; by the ancient versions, instead of using it as a proper name, a word meaning ''Fruitful Or Fat'' is adopted. Thus, in &nbsp;Psalms 22:13, for ''Bashan,'' we find in Sept. '''''Πίονες''''' ; Aquila, '''''Λιπαροί''''' ; Symmachus, '''''Σιτιστοί''''' ; and Vulg. ''Pingues'' (Psalm 67:16), for ''Hill Of Bashan;'' Sept. '''''Ὄρος''''' '''''Πῖον''''' ; [[Jerome]] (see Bochart, ''Hierozoicon,'' pt. 1, col. 531), ''Mons Pinguis.'' The richness of the pasture-land of Bashan, and the consequent superiority of its breed of cattle, are frequently alluded to in the Scriptures. We read in &nbsp;Deuteronomy 22:14, of "rams of the breed (Heb. ''Sons'' ) of Bashan." (&nbsp;Ezekiel 39:18), "Rams, lambs, bulls, goats, all of them fatlings of Bashan." The oaks of Bashan are mentioned in connection with the cedars of [[Lebanon]] (&nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Zechariah 11:2). In Ezekiel's description of the wealth and magnificence of Tyre it is said, "Of the oaks of Bashan have they made their oars" (&nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6). The ancient commentators on &nbsp;Amos 4:1, "the kine of Bashan," Jerome, Theodoret, and Cyril, speak in the strongest terms of the exuberant fertility of Bashan (Bochart, ''Hierozoicon,'' pt. 1, col. 306), and modern travelers corroborate their assertions. See Burckhardt's ''Travels In Syria,'' p. 286-288; Buckingham's ''Travels In Palest.'' 2:112-117. </p> <p> The first notice of this country is in &nbsp;Genesis 14:5. [[Chedorlaomer]] and his confederates "smote the [[Rephaims]] in Ashtaroth Karnaim." Now Og, king of Bashan, dwelt in Ashtaroth, and "was of the remnant of the Rephaim" (Auth. Vers. "giants"), &nbsp;Joshua 12:4. When the [[Israelites]] invaded the [[Promised]] Land, Argob, a province of Bashan, contained "sixty fenced cities, with walls, and gates, and brazen bars, besides unwalled towns a great many" (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:4-5; &nbsp;1 Kings 4:13). All these were taken by the children of Israel after their conquest of the land of [[Sihon]] from Arnon to Jabbok. They "turned" from their road over Jordan and "went up by the way of Bashan" '''''—''''' probably very much the same as that now followed by the pilgrims of the Haj route and by the Romans before them '''''—''''' to Edrei, on the western edge of the Lejah. See EDREI Here they encountered Og, king of Bashan, who "came out" probably from the natural fastnesses of Argob only to meet the entire destruction of himself, his sons, and all his people (&nbsp;Numbers 21:33-35; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:1-3). Argob, with its 60 strongly fortified cities, evidently formed a principal portion of Bashan (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:4-5), though still only a portion (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:13), there being besides a large number of unwalled towns (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:5). Its chief cities were Ashtaroth (i.e. Beeshterah, comp. &nbsp;Joshua 21:27 with &nbsp;1 Chronicles 6:71), Edrei, Golan, Salcah, and possibly Mahanaim (&nbsp;Joshua 13:30). Two of these cities, viz. Golan and Beeshterah, were allotted to the Levites of the family of Gershom, the former as a "city of refuge" (&nbsp;Joshua 21:27; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 6:71). The important district was bestowed on the half tribe of Manasseh (&nbsp;Joshua 13:29-31), together with "half Gilead." After the [[Manassites]] had assisted their brethren in the conquest of the country west of the Jordan, they went to their tents and to their cattle in the possession which Moses had given them in Bashan (&nbsp;Joshua 22:7-8). It is doubtful, however, whether the limits of this tribe ever extended over the whole of this region. (See Manasseh). </p> <p> Solomon appointed twelve officers to furnish the monthly supplies for the royal household, and allotted the region of Argob to the son of [[Geber]] (&nbsp;1 Kings 4:13). Toward the close of Jehu's reign, Hazael invaded the land of Israel, and smote the whole eastern territory, "even Gilead and Bashan" (&nbsp;2 Kings 10:33; Joseph. ''Ant.'' 9:8, 1); but after his death the cities he had taken were recovered by [[Jehoash]] (Joash) (&nbsp;2 Kings 13:25), who defeated the [[Syrians]] in three battles, as [[Elisha]] had predicted (&nbsp;2 Kings 13:19; Joseph. Ant. 9:8, 7). After this date, although the "oaks" of its forests and the wild cattle of its pastures '''''''''' the "strong bulls of Bashan" '''''''''' long retained their proverbial fame (&nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6; &nbsp;Psalms 22:12), and the beauty of its high downs and wide-sweeping plains could not but strike now and then the heart of a poet (&nbsp;Amos 4:1; &nbsp;Psalms 68:15; &nbsp;Jeremiah 50:19; &nbsp;Micah 7:14), yet the country almost disappears from history; its very name seems to have given place as quickly as possible to one which had a connection with the story of the founder of the nation (&nbsp;Genesis 31:47-48), and therefore more claim to use. Even so early as the time of the conquest, "Gilead" seems to have begun to take the first place as the designation of the country beyond the Jordan, a place which it retained afterward to the exclusion of Bashan (comp. &nbsp;Joshua 22:9; &nbsp;Joshua 22:15; &nbsp;Joshua 22:32; &nbsp;Judges 20:1; &nbsp;Psalms 60:7; &nbsp;Psalms 108:8; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 27:21; &nbsp;2 Kings 15:29). Indeed "Bashan" is most frequently used as a mere accompaniment to the name of Og, when his overthrow is alluded to in the national poetry. After the captivity the name Batanaea was applied to only a part of the ancient Bashan; the three remaining sections being called Trachonitis, Auranitis, and Gaulanitis (Lightfoot's Works, 10:282). All these provinces were granted by [[Augustus]] to Herod the Great, and on his death Batanaea formed a part of Philip's tetrarchy (Joseph. War, 2:6, 3; Ant. 18:4, 6). At his decease, A.D. 34, it was annexed by [[Tiberius]] to the province of Syria; but in A.D. 37 it was given by [[Caligula]] to Herod Agrippa, the son of Aristobulus, with the title of king (&nbsp;Acts 12:1; Joseph. ''Ant.'' 18:6, 10). From the time of Agrippa's death, in A.D. 44, to A.D. 53, the government again reverted to the Romans, but it was then restored by [[Claudius]] to [[Agrippa]] II (&nbsp;Acts 25:13; Joseph. ''Ant.'' 20, 7, 1). The ancient limits of Bashan are very strictly defined. It extended from the "border of Gilead" on the south to Mount Hermon on the north (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:3; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:14; &nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 5:23), and from the Arabah or Jordan valley on the west to Salcah and the border of the Geshurites and the Maacathites on the east (&nbsp;Joshua 12:3-5; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10). The sacred writers include in Bashan that part of the country eastward of the Jordan which was given to half the tribe of Manasseh, situated to the north of Gilead. Bochart incorrectly places it between the rivers Jabbok and Arnon, and speaks of it as the allotment of the tribes of Reuben and [[Gad]] (&nbsp;Numbers 32:33). Of the four post-exilian provinces, Gaulanitis, Auranitis, Trachonitis, and Batanaea, all but the third have retained almost perfectly their ancient names, the modern Lejah alone having superseded the Argob and Trachonitis of the Old and New Testaments. The province of Jaulan is the most western of the four; it abuts on the Sea of [[Galilee]] and the Lake of Merom, from the former of which it rises to a plateau nearly 3000 feet above the surface of the water. This plateau, though now almost wholly uncultivated, is of a rich soil, and its north-west portion rises into a range of hills almost everywhere clothed with oak forests (Porter, 2:259). No less than 127 ruined villages are scattered over its surface. (See Golan). </p> <p> The Hauran is to the southeast of the last named province and south of the Lejah; like Jaulan, its surface is perfectly flat, and its soil esteemed among the most fertile in Syria. It too contains an immense number of ruined towns, and also many inhabited villages. (See Hauran). </p> <p> The contrast which the rocky intricacies of the Lejah present to the rich and flat plains of the Hauran and the Jaulan has already been noticed. (See Argob). </p> <p> The remaining district, though no doubt much smaller in extent than the ancient Bashan, still retains its name, modified by a change frequent in the Oriental languages. ''Ard El-Bataniyeh'' lies on the east of the Lejah and the north of the range of Jebel Hauran or ed-Druze (Porter, 2:57). It is a mountainous district of the most picturesque character, abounding with forests of evergreen oak, and with soil extremely rich; the surface studded with towns of very remote antiquity, deserted, it is true, but yet standing almost as perfect as the day they were built. For the boundaries and characteristics of these provinces, and the most complete researches yet published into this interesting portion of Palestine, see Porter's Damascus, vol. 2; comp. Schwarz, Palest. p. 219; Jour. Sac. Lit. Jan. 1852, p. 363, 364; July, 1854, p. 282 sq.; Porter, [[Giant]] Cities (Lond. 1865). </p>
          
          
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_1408" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_1408" /> ==
<p> '''''bā´shan''''' ( הבּשׁן , <i> '''''ha''''' </i> - <i> '''''bāshān''''' </i> , "the Bashan"; Βασάν , <i> '''''Basán''''' </i> ): This name is probably the same in meaning as the cognate Arabic <i> '''''bathneh''''' </i> , "soft, fertile land," or <i> '''''bathaniyeh''''' </i> ( <i> '''''batanaea''''' </i> ), "this land sown with wheat" ("wheatland"). </p> 1. Boundaries <p> It often occurs with the article, "the Bashan," to describe the kingdom of Og, the most northerly part of the land East of the Jordan. It stretched from the border of Gilead in the South to the slopes of Hermen in the North. Hermon itself is never definitely included in Bashan, although Og is said to have ruled in that mountain (&nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;Joshua 13:11 ). In &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10 Salecah and Edrei seem to indicate the East and West limits respectively. This would agree with &nbsp; Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;Joshua 13:11 , which seem to make [[Geshur]] and [[Maacath]] the western boundary of Bashan. If this were so, then these unconquered peoples literally "dwelt in the midst of Israel." On the other hand &nbsp;Deuteronomy 4:47 may mean that the Jordan formed the western boundary; while &nbsp; Deuteronomy 33:22 makes Bashan extend to the springs of the Jordan. If Golan lay in the district in which its name is still preserved ( <i> '''''el Jaulan''''' </i> ), this also brings it to the lip of the Jordan valley (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 4:43 ). "A mountain of summits," or "protuberances" (&nbsp;Psalm 68:15 , &nbsp;Psalm 68:16 : Hebrew), might describe the highlands of the Jaulan, with its many volcanic hills as seen from the West. "A mountain of God" however does not so well apply to this region. Perhaps we should, with Wetzstein ( <i> Das batanaische Giebelgebirge </i> ) take these phrases as descriptive of <i> '''''Jebel Ḥaurān''''' </i> , now usually called <i> '''''Jebel ed''''' </i> - <i> '''''Druze''''' </i> , with its many striking summits. This range protected the province from encroachment by the sands of the wilderness from the East. On the South Bashan marched with the desert steppe, <i> '''''el''''' </i> - <i> '''''Ḥamād''''' </i> , and Gilead. Of the western boundary as we have seen there can be no certainty. It is equally impossible to draw any definite line in the North. </p> 2. Characteristics <p> Bashan Thus included the fertile, wooded slopes of <i> '''''Jebel ed''''' </i> - <i> '''''Druze''''' </i> , the extraordinarily rich plain of <i> '''''el''''' </i> - <i> '''''Ḥaurān''''' </i> ( <i> '''''en''''' </i> - <i> '''''Nuḳrah''''' </i> - see Hauran ), the rocky tract of <i> '''''el''''' </i> - <i> '''''Lejā'''''' </i> , the region now known as <i> '''''el''''' </i> - <i> '''''Jēdūr''''' </i> , resembling the <i> '''''Ḥaurān''''' </i> in character, but less cultivated; and, perhaps, the breezy uplands of <i> '''''el''''' </i> - <i> '''''Jaulān''''' </i> , with its splendid reaches of pasture land. It was a land rich in great cities, as existing ruins sufficiently testify. It can hardly be doubted that many of these occupy sites of great antiquity. We may specially note Ashtaroth and Edrei, the cities of Og; Golan, the city of refuge, the site of which is still in doubt; and Salecah ( <i> '''''Ṣalkhad''''' </i> ), the fortress on the ridge of the mountain, marking the extreme eastern limit of Israel's possessions. </p> <p> The famous oaks of Bashan (&nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6 ) have their modern representatives on the mountain slopes. It seems strange that in Scripture there is no notice of the wheat crops for which the country is in such repute today. Along with [[Carmel]] it stood for the fruitfulness of the land (&nbsp;Isaiah 33:9 etc.); and their languishing was an evident mark of God's displeasure (&nbsp; Nahum 1:4 ). The "bulls of Bashan" represent blatant and brutal strength (&nbsp;Psalm 22:12 , etc.). It is long since the lion deserted the plateau (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 33:22 ); but the leopard is still not unknown among the mountains (&nbsp;Song of Solomon 4:8 ). </p> 3. History <p> In pre-Israelite days Bashan was ruled by Og the Amorite. His defeat at Edrei marked the end of his kingdom (&nbsp;Numbers 21:33; &nbsp;Joshua 13:11 ), and the land was given to the half tribe of Manasseh (&nbsp;Joshua 13:30 , etc.). In the [[Syrian]] wars Bashan was lost to Israel (&nbsp;1 Kings 22:3; &nbsp;2 Kings 8:28; &nbsp;2 Kings 10:32 f), but it was regained by Jeroboam Ii (&nbsp;2 Kings 14:25 ). It was incorporated in the [[Assyrian]] empire by Tiglath-pileser Iii (&nbsp;2 Kings 15:29 ). In the 2nd century bc it was in the hands of the Nabateans. It formed part of the kingdom of Herod the Great, and then belonged to that of [[Philip]] and Agrippa II. </p>
<p> ''''' bā´shan ''''' ( הבּשׁן , <i> ''''' ha ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' bāshān ''''' </i> , "the Bashan"; Βασάν , <i> ''''' Basán ''''' </i> ): This name is probably the same in meaning as the cognate Arabic <i> ''''' bathneh ''''' </i> , "soft, fertile land," or <i> ''''' bathaniyeh ''''' </i> ( <i> ''''' batanaea ''''' </i> ), "this land sown with wheat" ("wheatland"). </p> 1. Boundaries <p> It often occurs with the article, "the Bashan," to describe the kingdom of Og, the most northerly part of the land East of the Jordan. It stretched from the border of Gilead in the South to the slopes of Hermen in the North. Hermon itself is never definitely included in Bashan, although Og is said to have ruled in that mountain (&nbsp;Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;Joshua 13:11 ). In &nbsp;Deuteronomy 3:10 Salecah and Edrei seem to indicate the East and West limits respectively. This would agree with &nbsp; Joshua 12:5; &nbsp;Joshua 13:11 , which seem to make [[Geshur]] and [[Maacath]] the western boundary of Bashan. If this were so, then these unconquered peoples literally "dwelt in the midst of Israel." On the other hand &nbsp;Deuteronomy 4:47 may mean that the Jordan formed the western boundary; while &nbsp; Deuteronomy 33:22 makes Bashan extend to the springs of the Jordan. If Golan lay in the district in which its name is still preserved ( <i> ''''' el Jaulan ''''' </i> ), this also brings it to the lip of the Jordan valley (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 4:43 ). "A mountain of summits," or "protuberances" (&nbsp;Psalm 68:15 , &nbsp;Psalm 68:16 : Hebrew), might describe the highlands of the Jaulan, with its many volcanic hills as seen from the West. "A mountain of God" however does not so well apply to this region. Perhaps we should, with Wetzstein ( <i> Das batanaische Giebelgebirge </i> ) take these phrases as descriptive of <i> ''''' Jebel Ḥaurān ''''' </i> , now usually called <i> ''''' Jebel ed ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Druze ''''' </i> , with its many striking summits. This range protected the province from encroachment by the sands of the wilderness from the East. On the South Bashan marched with the desert steppe, <i> ''''' el ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Ḥamād ''''' </i> , and Gilead. Of the western boundary as we have seen there can be no certainty. It is equally impossible to draw any definite line in the North. </p> 2. Characteristics <p> Bashan Thus included the fertile, wooded slopes of <i> ''''' Jebel ed ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Druze ''''' </i> , the extraordinarily rich plain of <i> ''''' el ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Ḥaurān ''''' </i> ( <i> ''''' en ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Nuḳrah ''''' </i> - see Hauran ), the rocky tract of <i> ''''' el ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Lejā' ''''' </i> , the region now known as <i> ''''' el ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Jēdūr ''''' </i> , resembling the <i> ''''' Ḥaurān ''''' </i> in character, but less cultivated; and, perhaps, the breezy uplands of <i> ''''' el ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Jaulān ''''' </i> , with its splendid reaches of pasture land. It was a land rich in great cities, as existing ruins sufficiently testify. It can hardly be doubted that many of these occupy sites of great antiquity. We may specially note Ashtaroth and Edrei, the cities of Og; Golan, the city of refuge, the site of which is still in doubt; and Salecah ( <i> ''''' Ṣalkhad ''''' </i> ), the fortress on the ridge of the mountain, marking the extreme eastern limit of Israel's possessions. </p> <p> The famous oaks of Bashan (&nbsp;Isaiah 2:13; &nbsp;Ezekiel 27:6 ) have their modern representatives on the mountain slopes. It seems strange that in Scripture there is no notice of the wheat crops for which the country is in such repute today. Along with [[Carmel]] it stood for the fruitfulness of the land (&nbsp;Isaiah 33:9 etc.); and their languishing was an evident mark of God's displeasure (&nbsp; Nahum 1:4 ). The "bulls of Bashan" represent blatant and brutal strength (&nbsp;Psalm 22:12 , etc.). It is long since the lion deserted the plateau (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 33:22 ); but the leopard is still not unknown among the mountains (&nbsp;Song of Solomon 4:8 ). </p> 3. History <p> In pre-Israelite days Bashan was ruled by Og the Amorite. His defeat at Edrei marked the end of his kingdom (&nbsp;Numbers 21:33; &nbsp;Joshua 13:11 ), and the land was given to the half tribe of Manasseh (&nbsp;Joshua 13:30 , etc.). In the [[Syrian]] wars Bashan was lost to Israel (&nbsp;1 Kings 22:3; &nbsp;2 Kings 8:28; &nbsp;2 Kings 10:32 f), but it was regained by Jeroboam Ii (&nbsp;2 Kings 14:25 ). It was incorporated in the [[Assyrian]] empire by Tiglath-pileser Iii (&nbsp;2 Kings 15:29 ). In the 2nd century bc it was in the hands of the Nabateans. It formed part of the kingdom of Herod the Great, and then belonged to that of [[Philip]] and Agrippa II. </p>
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15212" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15212" /> ==