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== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35998" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35998" /> ==
<p> &nbsp;Numbers 22:1; &nbsp;Joshua 2:1-3; &nbsp;Joshua 2:5; &nbsp;Joshua 2:15; &nbsp;Joshua 3:16. From a root "fragrance," or "the moon" (yareach ), being the seat of [[Canaanite]] moon worship, or "broad" from its being in a plain bounded by the Jordan. [[Jericho]] is to the W., opposite where [[Israel]] crossed the [[Jordan]] under Joshua, at six miles' distance. It had its king. [[Walls]] enclosed it, and its gate was regularly shut, according to eastern custom, when it was dark. Its spoil included silver, gold, vessels of iron and brass (&nbsp;Joshua 6:19), cast in the same plain of Jordan where [[Solomon]] had his foundry (&nbsp;1 Chronicles 4:17). The "Babylonian garment" (&nbsp;Joshua 7:21) betokens its commerce with the East. Joshua's two spies lodged in Rahab's house upon the wall; and she in reward for their safety received her own preservation, and that of all in her house, when Joshua burned the city with fire, and slew man and beast, as all had been put under the ban. The metals were taken to the treasury of the sanctuary (&nbsp;Joshua 6:17-19; &nbsp;Joshua 6:21-25). </p> <p> Other towns had their inhabitants only slain, as under the divine ban (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 7:2; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 20:16-17; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 2:34-35), while the cattle and booty fell to the conquerors. Jericho's men, cattle, and booty were all put under the ban, as being the first town of [[Canaan]] which the Lord had given them. They were to offer it as the firstfruits, a sign that they received the whole land as a fief from His hand. The plain was famed for palms and balsams, whence Jericho is called "the city of palms" (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:3; &nbsp;Judges 1:16; &nbsp;Judges 3:13; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:15). The town stood, according to some, N. of the poor village Riha, by the wady Kelt. However, modern research places it a quarter of a mile from the mountain [[Quarantana]] (the traditional scene of Christ's temptation), at the fountain of Elisha. This accords with &nbsp;Joshua 16:1, "the water of Jericho," and [[Josephus]] mentions the fount and the mountain near (B. J., 4:8, section 2-3). Traces of buildings occur S. of the fountain. Its site was given to [[Benjamin]] (&nbsp;Joshua 18:21). </p> <p> It is mentioned in David's time as a town (&nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5). Joshua's curse therefore was not aimed against rebuilding the town, which the Benjamites did, but against its miraculously overthrown walls being restored, against its being made again a fortress. See [[Hiel]] in Ahab's ungodly reign incurred the curse (&nbsp;1 Kings 16:34). [[Elisha]] "healed the waters" of the fountain, called also [[Ain]] es [[Sultan]] (&nbsp;2 Kings 2:18-22), half an hour N.W. of Riha, in the rainy season forming a brook, which flows through the wady Kelt into the Jordan. Here myrobalanum, acacias, figtrees, etc., stand where once grew Jericho's famous palms. In its plains [[Zedekiah]] was overtaken by the Chalaeans (&nbsp;2 Kings 25:5; &nbsp;Jeremiah 39:5). Robbers still infest the road from [[Jerusalem]] down (a steep descent) to Jericho, as when Jesus spoke the parable of the good [[Samaritan]] (&nbsp;Luke 10:30); Pompey undertook to destroy their strongholds not long before. Moreover, some of the courses of priests lived at Jericho, which harmonizes with the mention of the priest and [[Levite]] returning that way from Jerusalem. </p> <p> From mount Pisgah, the peak near the town Nebo, on its western slope (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:1), Moses looked "over against Jericho." Jericho strategically was the key of the land, being situated at the entrance of two passes through the hills, one leading to Jerusalem the other to [[Ai]] and Bethel. "By faith the walls of Jericho fell down, after they were compassed about seven days" (whereas sieges often last for years) (&nbsp;Hebrews 11:30). Trumpets, though one were to sound for ten thousand years, cannot throw down walls; but faith can do all things (Chrysostom). Six successive days the armed host marched round the city, the priests bearing the ark, as symbol of His presence, in the middle between the armed men in front and the rereward or rearguard, and seven priests sounding seven ramshorn (rather Jubilee) trumpets, the sign of judgment by "the breath of His mouth"; compare the seven trumpets that usher in judgments in Revelation, especially &nbsp;Revelation 11:13; &nbsp;Revelation 11:15. </p> <p> On the seventh day they compassed Jericho seven times, and at the seventh time the priests blew one long blast, the people shouted, and the wall fell flat. Even though volcanic agency, of which traces are visible in the Jordan valley, may have been employed, the fall was no less miraculous; it would prove that the God of revelation employs His own natural means in the spiritual world, by supernatural will ordering the exact time and direction of those natural agencies to subserve His purposes of grace to His people, and foreannouncing to them the fact, and connecting it with their obedience to His directions: so in the [[Egyptian]] plagues. The miracle wrought independently of all conflict on their part at the outset marked that the occupation of the whole [[Holy]] Land was to be by His gift, and that it was a, fief held under God at His pleasure. Under Elisha a school of prophets resided at Jericho. </p> <p> (&nbsp;2 Kings 2:5; &nbsp;2 Kings 4:1; &nbsp;2 Kings 6:1-2; &nbsp;2 Kings 5:24, for "tower" translated "the hill" before the city: Keil). Of "children of Jericho" 345 returned from [[Babylon]] (&nbsp;Ezra 2:34). They helped to rebuild the wall (&nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:36). [[Archelaus]] in our Lord's days had irrigated the plain and planted it with palms. Herod the Great had previously founded a new town (Phasaelis) higher up the plain. The distinction between the new and the old towns may solve the seeming discrepancy between Matthew (&nbsp;Matthew 20:30), who makes the miracle on the blind to be when Jesus was leaving Jericho, and Luke, who says it was when Jesus was come nigh unto Jericho (&nbsp;Luke 18:35). </p> <p> The Lord Himself, in whose genealogy [[Rahab]] the harlot is found, here was guest of [[Zacchaeus]] the publican, a lucrative office in so rich a city as the Roman Jericho was. The tree that Zacchaeus climbed was the fig mulberry or tree fig. The Lord's visit to [[Bethany]] appropriately follows His parable of the good Samaritan who relieved the man robbed between Jerusalem and Jericho, for Jesus was then traveling from Jericho to Jerusalem, and Bethany was only a little way short of Jerusalem (&nbsp;Luke 10:25; &nbsp;Luke 10:38; &nbsp;John 11:1). James and John's proposal to call fire down upon the [[Samaritans]] who would not receive Him in an earlier stage of the journey suggested probably His choosing a Samaritan to represent the benefactor in the parable, a tacit rebuke to their un-Christlike spirit (&nbsp;Luke 9:51-56). </p>
<p> &nbsp;Numbers 22:1; &nbsp;Joshua 2:1-3; &nbsp;Joshua 2:5; &nbsp;Joshua 2:15; &nbsp;Joshua 3:16. From a root "fragrance," or "the moon" ( '''''Yareach''''' ), being the seat of [[Canaanite]] moon worship, or "broad" from its being in a plain bounded by the Jordan. [[Jericho]] is to the W., opposite where [[Israel]] crossed the [[Jordan]] under Joshua, at six miles' distance. It had its king. [[Walls]] enclosed it, and its gate was regularly shut, according to eastern custom, when it was dark. Its spoil included silver, gold, vessels of iron and brass (&nbsp;Joshua 6:19), cast in the same plain of Jordan where [[Solomon]] had his foundry (&nbsp;1 Chronicles 4:17). The "Babylonian garment" (&nbsp;Joshua 7:21) betokens its commerce with the East. Joshua's two spies lodged in Rahab's house upon the wall; and she in reward for their safety received her own preservation, and that of all in her house, when Joshua burned the city with fire, and slew man and beast, as all had been put under the ban. The metals were taken to the treasury of the sanctuary (&nbsp;Joshua 6:17-19; &nbsp;Joshua 6:21-25). </p> <p> Other towns had their inhabitants only slain, as under the divine ban (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 7:2; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 20:16-17; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 2:34-35), while the cattle and booty fell to the conquerors. Jericho's men, cattle, and booty were all put under the ban, as being the first town of [[Canaan]] which the Lord had given them. They were to offer it as the firstfruits, a sign that they received the whole land as a fief from His hand. The plain was famed for palms and balsams, whence Jericho is called "the city of palms" (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:3; &nbsp;Judges 1:16; &nbsp;Judges 3:13; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:15). The town stood, according to some, N. of the poor village Riha, by the wady Kelt. However, modern research places it a quarter of a mile from the mountain [[Quarantana]] (the traditional scene of Christ's temptation), at the fountain of Elisha. This accords with &nbsp;Joshua 16:1, "the water of Jericho," and [[Josephus]] mentions the fount and the mountain near (B. J., 4:8, section 2-3). Traces of buildings occur S. of the fountain. Its site was given to [[Benjamin]] (&nbsp;Joshua 18:21). </p> <p> It is mentioned in David's time as a town (&nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5). Joshua's curse therefore was not aimed against rebuilding the town, which the Benjamites did, but against its miraculously overthrown walls being restored, against its being made again a fortress. See [[Hiel]] in Ahab's ungodly reign incurred the curse (&nbsp;1 Kings 16:34). [[Elisha]] "healed the waters" of the fountain, called also [[Ain]] es [[Sultan]] (&nbsp;2 Kings 2:18-22), half an hour N.W. of Riha, in the rainy season forming a brook, which flows through the wady Kelt into the Jordan. Here myrobalanum, acacias, figtrees, etc., stand where once grew Jericho's famous palms. In its plains [[Zedekiah]] was overtaken by the Chalaeans (&nbsp;2 Kings 25:5; &nbsp;Jeremiah 39:5). Robbers still infest the road from [[Jerusalem]] down (a steep descent) to Jericho, as when Jesus spoke the parable of the good [[Samaritan]] (&nbsp;Luke 10:30); Pompey undertook to destroy their strongholds not long before. Moreover, some of the courses of priests lived at Jericho, which harmonizes with the mention of the priest and [[Levite]] returning that way from Jerusalem. </p> <p> From mount Pisgah, the peak near the town Nebo, on its western slope (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:1), Moses looked "over against Jericho." Jericho strategically was the key of the land, being situated at the entrance of two passes through the hills, one leading to Jerusalem the other to [[Ai]] and Bethel. "By faith the walls of Jericho fell down, after they were compassed about seven days" (whereas sieges often last for years) (&nbsp;Hebrews 11:30). Trumpets, though one were to sound for ten thousand years, cannot throw down walls; but faith can do all things (Chrysostom). Six successive days the armed host marched round the city, the priests bearing the ark, as symbol of His presence, in the middle between the armed men in front and the rereward or rearguard, and seven priests sounding seven ramshorn (rather Jubilee) trumpets, the sign of judgment by "the breath of His mouth"; compare the seven trumpets that usher in judgments in Revelation, especially &nbsp;Revelation 11:13; &nbsp;Revelation 11:15. </p> <p> On the seventh day they compassed Jericho seven times, and at the seventh time the priests blew one long blast, the people shouted, and the wall fell flat. Even though volcanic agency, of which traces are visible in the Jordan valley, may have been employed, the fall was no less miraculous; it would prove that the God of revelation employs His own natural means in the spiritual world, by supernatural will ordering the exact time and direction of those natural agencies to subserve His purposes of grace to His people, and foreannouncing to them the fact, and connecting it with their obedience to His directions: so in the [[Egyptian]] plagues. The miracle wrought independently of all conflict on their part at the outset marked that the occupation of the whole [[Holy]] Land was to be by His gift, and that it was a, fief held under God at His pleasure. Under Elisha a school of prophets resided at Jericho. </p> <p> (&nbsp;2 Kings 2:5; &nbsp;2 Kings 4:1; &nbsp;2 Kings 6:1-2; &nbsp;2 Kings 5:24, for "tower" translated "the hill" before the city: Keil). Of "children of Jericho" 345 returned from [[Babylon]] (&nbsp;Ezra 2:34). They helped to rebuild the wall (&nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:36). [[Archelaus]] in our Lord's days had irrigated the plain and planted it with palms. Herod the Great had previously founded a new town (Phasaelis) higher up the plain. The distinction between the new and the old towns may solve the seeming discrepancy between Matthew (&nbsp;Matthew 20:30), who makes the miracle on the blind to be when Jesus was leaving Jericho, and Luke, who says it was when Jesus was come nigh unto Jericho (&nbsp;Luke 18:35). </p> <p> The Lord Himself, in whose genealogy [[Rahab]] the harlot is found, here was guest of [[Zacchaeus]] the publican, a lucrative office in so rich a city as the Roman Jericho was. The tree that Zacchaeus climbed was the fig mulberry or tree fig. The Lord's visit to [[Bethany]] appropriately follows His parable of the good Samaritan who relieved the man robbed between Jerusalem and Jericho, for Jesus was then traveling from Jericho to Jerusalem, and Bethany was only a little way short of Jerusalem (&nbsp;Luke 10:25; &nbsp;Luke 10:38; &nbsp;John 11:1). James and John's proposal to call fire down upon the [[Samaritans]] who would not receive Him in an earlier stage of the journey suggested probably His choosing a Samaritan to represent the benefactor in the parable, a tacit rebuke to their un-Christlike spirit (&nbsp;Luke 9:51-56). </p>
          
          
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_80938" /> ==
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_80938" /> ==
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== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_70303" /> ==
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_70303" /> ==
<p> [[Jericho]] (''Jĕr'I-Kô'' ), ''City Of The Moon,'' or ''Place Of Fragrance.'' A city of Benjamin, situated in the valley of the Jordan, on the west side of that river, and north of its entrance into the Dead sea. &nbsp;Joshua 2:1-3; &nbsp;1 Kings 16:34. It was also called the City of Palm-trees. &nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:3; &nbsp;Judges 1:16. As Jericho was the first city that was taken, on the west of the Jordan, the ban was laid on all the property in it. Joshua burned the city with fire, and pronounced a solemn curse upon the person who, at any succeeding period, should build its walls or set up its gates. &nbsp;Joshua 4:13; which was executed upon Hiel, 533 years afterward. &nbsp;1 Kings 16:33-34. Previous to this, however, the city had been rebuilt, but not upon its ancient foundations. &nbsp;Judges 3:13; &nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5; &nbsp;2 Kings 2:4-5. The more ancient city was probably in the neighborhood of the beautiful fountain, which is apparently the same whose waters Elisha healed. &nbsp;2 Kings 2:18-22. The later Jericho appears to have occupied the site of the miserable and filthy village, Er-Riha, nearly two miles from the fountain. &nbsp;Ezra 2:34; &nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2; &nbsp;Matthew 19:1; &nbsp;Matthew 20:29-34; &nbsp;Mark 10:1; &nbsp;Mark 10:46; &nbsp;Mark 10:52; &nbsp;Luke 18:35-43; &nbsp;Luke 19:1-10. Riha lies almost desert; and even that "one solitary palm tree" which Dr. Robinson saw is gone. The inhabitants are a feeble and licentious race. The road between Jerusalem and Jericho still retains its ancient character for scenes of assault and robbery. &nbsp;Luke 10:30. </p>
<p> [[Jericho]] ( ''Jĕr'I-Kô'' ), ''City Of The Moon,'' or ''Place Of Fragrance.'' A city of Benjamin, situated in the valley of the Jordan, on the west side of that river, and north of its entrance into the Dead sea. &nbsp;Joshua 2:1-3; &nbsp;1 Kings 16:34. It was also called the City of Palm-trees. &nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:3; &nbsp;Judges 1:16. As Jericho was the first city that was taken, on the west of the Jordan, the ban was laid on all the property in it. Joshua burned the city with fire, and pronounced a solemn curse upon the person who, at any succeeding period, should build its walls or set up its gates. &nbsp;Joshua 4:13; which was executed upon Hiel, 533 years afterward. &nbsp;1 Kings 16:33-34. Previous to this, however, the city had been rebuilt, but not upon its ancient foundations. &nbsp;Judges 3:13; &nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5; &nbsp;2 Kings 2:4-5. The more ancient city was probably in the neighborhood of the beautiful fountain, which is apparently the same whose waters Elisha healed. &nbsp;2 Kings 2:18-22. The later Jericho appears to have occupied the site of the miserable and filthy village, Er-Riha, nearly two miles from the fountain. &nbsp;Ezra 2:34; &nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2; &nbsp;Matthew 19:1; &nbsp;Matthew 20:29-34; &nbsp;Mark 10:1; &nbsp;Mark 10:46; &nbsp;Mark 10:52; &nbsp;Luke 18:35-43; &nbsp;Luke 19:1-10. Riha lies almost desert; and even that "one solitary palm tree" which Dr. Robinson saw is gone. The inhabitants are a feeble and licentious race. The road between Jerusalem and Jericho still retains its ancient character for scenes of assault and robbery. &nbsp;Luke 10:30. </p>
          
          
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_47985" /> ==
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_47985" /> ==
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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_46103" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_46103" /> ==
<p> (Heb. Yericho', יְרַיחוֹ, place of ''Fragrance'' , prob. from balsamous herbs growing there; &nbsp;Joshua 2:1-3; &nbsp;Joshua 3:16; &nbsp;Joshua 4:13; &nbsp;Joshua 4:19; &nbsp;Joshua 5:10; &nbsp;Joshua 5:13; &nbsp;Joshua 6:1-2; &nbsp;Joshua 6:25-26; &nbsp;Joshua 7:2; &nbsp;Joshua 8:2; &nbsp;Joshua 9:3; &nbsp;Joshua 10:1; &nbsp;Joshua 10:28; &nbsp;Joshua 10:30; &nbsp;Joshua 12:9; &nbsp;Joshua 13:32; &nbsp;Joshua 16:1; &nbsp;Joshua 16:7; &nbsp;Joshua 18:12; &nbsp;Joshua 18:21; &nbsp;Joshua 20:8; &nbsp;Joshua 24:11; &nbsp;2 Kings 2:4; &nbsp;2 Kings 2:15; &nbsp;2 Kings 2:18; also written יְרֵחוֹ, ''Yerecho'' ', &nbsp;Numbers 22:1; &nbsp;Numbers 26:3; &nbsp;Numbers 26:63; &nbsp;Numbers 31:12; &nbsp;Numbers 33:48; &nbsp;Numbers 33:50; &nbsp;Numbers 34:15; &nbsp;Numbers 35:1; &nbsp;Numbers 36:13; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:49; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:1; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:3; &nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5; &nbsp;2 Kings 25:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 6:78; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 19:5; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:15; &nbsp;Ezra 2:34; &nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:36; &nbsp;Jeremiah 39:5; Jeremiah 52, 8; once יְרַיחה, ''Yerichoh'' ', &nbsp;1 Kings 16:34; Sept. and N.T. Ι᾿εριχώ, Josephus Ι᾿εριχοῦς [Genesis οῦντος ]; Strabo, 16, 2, 41, ῾Ιερικοῦς; Ptolem. 5, 16, 7; ῾Ιερεικοῦς; Vulg. ''Jericho;'' Justin. ''Hierichus'' ), a city situated in a plain traversed by the Jordan and exactly over against where that river was crossed by the Israelites under Joshua (&nbsp;Joshua 3:16). It is first mentioned in connection with their approach to Palestine; they "pitched in the plains of Moab, on this side Jordan by Jericho" (&nbsp;Numbers 22:1). It was then a large and strong city and must have existed for a long period. The probability is that on the destruction of the cities of the plain by fire from heaven Jericho was founded, and perhaps by some who had resided nearer the scene of the catastrophe, but who abandoned their houses in fear. Had the city existed in the time of [[Abraham]] and Lot, it would scarcely have escaped notice when the latter looked down on the plain of Jordan from the heights of Bethel (Genesis 13). From the manner in which it is referred to, and the frequency with which it is mentioned, it was evidently the most important city in the Jordan valley at the time of the Exodus (&nbsp;Numbers 34:15; &nbsp;Numbers 31:12; &nbsp;Numbers 35:1, etc.). </p> <p> Such was either its vicinity or the extent of its territory that Gilgal, which formed their primary encampment, stood in its east border (&nbsp;Joshua 4:19). That it had a king is a very secondary consideration, for almost every small town had one (&nbsp;Joshua 12:9-24); in fact, monarchy was the only form of government known to those primitive times the government of the people of God presenting a marked exception to prevailing usage. But Jericho was further enclosed by walls — a fenced city — its walls were so considerable that at least one person (Rahab) had a house upon them (&nbsp;Joshua 2:15), and its gates were shut, as throughout the East still, "when it was dark" (&nbsp;Joshua 5:5). Again, the spoil that was found in it betokened its affluence — Ai, Makkedah, Libnah, Lachish, Eglon, Hebron, Debir, and even Hazor, evidently contained nothing worth mentioning in comparison — besides sheep, oxen, and asses, we hear of vessels of brass and iron. These possibly may have been the first fruits of those brass foundries "in the plain of Jordan" of which Solomon afterwards so largely availed himself (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 4:17). </p> <p> Silver and gold were found in such abundance that one man (Achan) could appropriate stealthily 200 shekels (100 oz. avoird.; see Lewis, ''Heb. Rep'' . 6, 57) of the former, and "a wedge of gold of 50 shekels (25 oz.) weight;" "a goodly [[Babylonish]] garment," purloined in the same dishonesty, may be adduced as evidence of a then- existing commerce between Jericho and the far East (&nbsp;Joshua 6:24; &nbsp;Joshua 7:21). In fact, its situation alone — in so noble a plain and contiguous to so prolific a river — would bespeak its importance in a country where these natural advantages have always been so highly prized and in an age when people depended so much more upon the indigenous resources of nature than they are compelled to do now. Jericho was the city to which the two spies were sent by Joshua from [[Shittim]] they were lodged in the house of Rahab the harlot upon the wall, and departed, having first promised to save her and all that were found in her house from destruction (&nbsp;Joshua 2:1-21). The account which the spies received from their hostess tended much to encourage the subsequent operations of the Israelites, as it showed that the inhabitants of the country were greatly alarmed at their advance, and the signal miracles which had marked their course from the Nile to the Jordan. </p> <p> The strange manner in which Jericho itself was taken (see Hacks, De ruina murorum Hierichuntiorun, Jena, 1690) must have strengthened this impression in the country, and appears, indeed, to have been designed for that effect. The town was utterly destroyed by the Israelites, who pronounced an awful curse upon whoever should rebuild it; and all the inhabitants were put to the sword, except Rahab and her family (Joshua 6). Her house was recognized by the scarlet line bound in the window from which the spies were let down, and she and her relatives were taken out of it, and "lodged without the camp;" but it is nowhere said or implied that her house escaped the general conflagration. That she "dwelt in Israel" for the future; that she married [[Salmon]] son of Naas-aon. "prince of the children of Judah," and had by him Boaz, the husband of Ruth and progenitor of David and of our Lord; and, lastly, that hers is the first and only [[Gentile]] name that appears in the list of the faithful of the O.T. given by Paul (&nbsp;Joshua 6:25; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 2:10; &nbsp;Matthew 1:5; &nbsp;Hebrews 11:31) all these facts surely indicate that she did not continue to inhabit the accursed site; and, if so, and in the absence of all direct evidence from Scripture, how could it ever have been inferred that her house was left standing? (See Hoffmann, ''Rahabs Erettung'' , Berl. 1861.) (See Rahab). </p> <p> Such as it had been left by Joshua, such it was bestowed by him upon the tribe of Benjamin (&nbsp;Joshua 18:21; it lay also on the border of [[Ephraim]] [&nbsp;Joshua 16:7]), and from this time a long interval elapses before Jericho appears again upon the scene. It is only incidentally mentioned in the life of David in connection with his embassy to the Ammonitish king (&nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5). The solemn manner in which its second foundation under Hiel the Bethelite is recorded — upon whom the curse of Joshua is said to have descended in full force (&nbsp;1 Kings 16:34) — would certainly seem to imply that up to that time its site had been uninhabited. It is true, mention is made of "a city of palm trees" (&nbsp;Judges 1:16; &nbsp;Judges 3:13) in existence apparently at the time when spoken of, and Jericho is twice — once [[Before]] its first overthrow — and once ''After'' its second foundation — designated by that name (see &nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:3, and &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:15); but these designations must be understood to apply only to the ''Site'' , in whatever condition at the time. (On the presence of these trees, see below.) However, once actually rebuilt, Jericho rose again slowly in importance. </p> <p> In its immediate vicinity the sons of the prophets sought retirement from the world and Elisha "healed the spring of the waters;" and over and against it, beyond Jordan, Elijah "went up by a whirlwind into heaven" (&nbsp;2 Kings 2:1-22). In its plains Zedekiah fell into the hands of the Chaldaeans (&nbsp;2 Kings 25:5; &nbsp;Jeremiah 39:5). By what may be called a retrospective account of it, we may infer that Hiel's restoration had not utterly failed, for in the return under Zerubbabel the "children of Jericho," 345 in number are comprised (Ezra 3:34; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:36); and it is even implied that they removed thither again, for the ''Men Of Jericho'' assisted Nehemiah in rebuilding that part of the wall of Jerusalem which was next to the sheep gate (&nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2). It was eventually fortified by the Syrian general Bacchides (&nbsp;1 [[Maccabees]] 9:50; Josephus, [[Ant]] . 13, 1, 3). </p> <p> The Jericho of the days of Josephus was distant 150 stadia from Jerusalem and sixty from the Jordan. It lay in a plain overhung by a barren mountain, whose roots ran northward towards Scythopolis and southward in the direction of [[Sodom]] and the Dead Sea. These formed the western boundaries of the plain. Eastward, its barriers were the mountains of Moab, which ran parallel to the former. In the midst of the plain — the great plain, as it was called — flowed the Jordan, and at the top and bottom of it were two lakes: Tiberias, proverbial for its sweetness, and Asphaltites for its bitterness. [[Away]] from the Jordan, it was parched and unhealthy during summer; but during winter, even when it snowed at Jerusalem, the inhabitants here wore linen garments. Hard by Jericho, bursting forth close to the site of the old city which Joshua took on his entrance into Canaan, was a most exuberant fountain, whose waters, before noted for their contrary properties, had received (proceeds Josephus) through Elisha's prayers their then wonderfully salutary and prolific efficacy. Within its range — seventy stadia (Strabo says 100) by twenty — the fertility of the soil was unexampled. [[Palms]] of various names and properties some that produced honey scarcely inferior to that of the neighborhood; opobalsamum, the choicest of indigenous fruits; cyprus (Arabic "el- henna"), and myrobalanum ("zukkum") throve there beautifully and thickly dotted about the pleasure grounds (War, 4, 8, 3). These and other aromatic shrubs were here of peculiar fragrance (Justin. 36:3; Josephus, Ant. 4, 6, 1; 14, 4, 1; 15, 4, 2; War, 1, 6, 6; 1, 18, 5). Wisdom herself did not disdain comparison with "the rose plants of Jericho" (&nbsp;Sirach 24:14). Well might Strabo (Geog. 16, 2, § 41, ed. Muller) conclude that its revenues were considerable. The peculiar productions mentioned, in addition to those noticed above, were honey (Cedren. p. 104) and, in later times, the sugar cane (see Robinson's Researches, 2, 290 sq.). (See [[Rose Of Jericho]]). </p> <p> By the Romans, Jericho was first visited under Pompey. He encamped there for a single night and subsequently destroyed two forts — Threx and [[Taurus]] — that commanded its approaches (Strabo, Geogr. § 40). [[Dagon]] (Josephus, War, 1, 2, 3) or [[Docus]] (&nbsp;1 Maccabees 16:15; comp. 9:50), where [[Ptolemy]] assassinated his father-in-law, Simon the Maccabee, may have been one of these strongholds, which were afterwards infested by bandits. Gabinius, in his resettlement of Judaea, made Jericho one of the five seats of assembly (Josephus, War, 1, 8, 5). With Herod the Great it rose to still greater prominence: it had been found full of treasure of all kinds; as in. the time of Joshua, so by his Roman allies who sacked it (ibid. 1, 15, 6); and its revenues were eagerly sought and rented by the wily tyrant from Cleopatra, to whom Antony had assigned them (Ant. 15, 4, 2). Not long afterwards he built a fort there, which he called "Cyprus," in honor of his mother (ibid. 16, 5); a tower, which he called, in honor of his brother, "Phasaelis;" and a number of new palaces, superior in their construction to those which had existed there previously, which he named after his friends. He even founded a new town higher up the plain, which he called, like the tower, [[Phasaelis]] ( War, 1, 21, 9). </p> <p> If he did not make Jericho his habitual residence, he at least retired thither to die and to be mourned, if he could have got his plan carried out; and it was in the amphitheater of Jericho that the news of his death was announced to the assembled soldiers and people by [[Salome]] (War, 1, 38, 8). Soon afterwards the place was burned and the town plundered by one Simon, a revolutionary that had been slave to Herod (Ant. 17, 10, 6); but Archelaus rebuilt the former sumptuously, founded a new town in the plain, that bore his own name, and, most important of all, diverted water from a village called Neaera to irrigate the plain, which he had planted with palms (Ant. 17, 13, 1). Thus Jericho was once more "a city of palms" when our Lord visited it. As the city that had so exceptionally contributed to his own ancestry as the city which had been the first to fall, amidst so much ceremony, before "the captain of the Lord's host and his servant Joshua" we may well suppose that his eyes surveyed it with unwonted interest. It is supposed to have been on the rocky heights overhanging it (hence called by tradition the Quarentana) that he was assailed by the tempter; and over against it, according to tradition likewise, he had been previously baptized in the Jordan. Here he restored sight to the blind (two certainly, perhaps three [&nbsp;Matthew 20:30; &nbsp;Mark 10:46]: this was in [[Leaving]] Jericho; Luke says "as he was ''Come [[Nigh]] Unto'' Jericho," etc. [&nbsp;Luke 18:35]). </p> <p> Here the descendant of Rahab did not disdain the hospitality of Zacchaeus the publican — an office which was likely to be lucrative enough in so rich a city. Finally, between Jerusalem and Jericho was laid the scene of his story of the good Samaritan, which, if it is not to be regarded as a real occurrence throughout, at least derives interest from the fact that robbers have ever been the terror of that precipitous road (comp. Phocas, ch. 20; see Schubert, 3, 72); and so formidable had they proved only just before the Christian era that Pompey had been induced to undertake the destruction of their strongholds (Strabo, as before, 16, 2, § 40; comp. Joseph. Ant. 20:6, 1 sq.). The way from Jerusalem to Jericho is still described by travellers as the most dangerous about Palestine. (See Hackett's Illustra. of Script. p. 206.) As lately as 1820, an English traveller, Sir Frederick Henniker, was attacked on this road by the Arabs with firearms, who stripped him naked and left him severely wounded. </p> <p> Posterior to the Gospels, Vespasian found it one of the toparchies of [[Judaea]] (War, 3, 3, 5), but deserted by its inhabitants in a great measure when he encamped there (ibid. 4, 8, 2). He left a garrison on his departure (not necessarily the 10th legion, which is only stated to have marched through Jericho) which was still there when Titus advanced upon Jerusalem. Is it asked how Jericho was destroyed? [[Evidently]] by Vespasian; for Josephus, rightly understood, is not so silent as Dr. Robinson (Bibl. Res. 1, 566, 2d ed.) thinks. The city pillaged and burnt in Josephus (War 4, 9, 1) was clearly Jericho, with its adjacent villages, and not Gerasa, as may be seen at once by comparing the language there with that of 8, 2, and the agent was Vespasian. Eusebius and Jerome (Onomast. s.v.) say that it was destroyed when Jerusalem was besieged by the Romans. They further add that it was afterwards rebuilt — they do not say by whom — and still existed in their day; nor had the ruins of the two preceding cities been obliterated. [[Could]] [[Hadrian]] possibly have planted a colony there when he passed through Judaea and founded Æ lia? (Dion Cass. Hist. 669, c. 11, ed. Sturz; more at large Chronicles Paschal. p. 254, ed. Da Fresne.) The discovery which [[Origen]] made there of a version of the O.T. (the 5th in his Hexapla), together with sundry MSS. Greek and Hebrew, suggests that it could not have been wholly without inhabitants (Euseb. E. H. 6, 16; Epiphan. Lib. de Pond. et Menesur. circa med.); or again, as is perhaps more probable, did a Christian settlement arise there under Constantine, when baptisms in the Jordan began to be the rage? That Jericho became an episcopal see about that time under Jerusalem appears from more than one ancient [[Notitia]] (Geograph. S. a Carolo Paulo, p. 306, and the Parergon appended to it; comp. [[William]] of Tyre, Hist. lib. 23, ad f.). Its bishops subscribed to various councils in the 4th, 5th, and 6th centuries (ibid. and Le Quien's Oriens Christian. 3, 654). </p> <p> Justinian, we are told, restored a hospice there, and likewise a church dedicated to the [[Virgin]] (Procop. De ''Oedif.'' 5, 9). As early as A.D. 337, when the [[Bordeaux]] pilgrim (ed. Wesseling) visited it, a house existed there which was pointed out, after the manner of those days, as the house of Rahab. This was roofless when Arculfts saw it; and not only so, but the third city was likewise in ruins (Adamn. De Locis S. ap. Migane, Patrolog. C. 88, 799). Had Jericho been visited by an earthquake, as [[Antoninus]] reports (ap. Ugoilini Thesaur. 7, p. 1213, and note to c. 3), and as Syria certainly was, in the 27th year of Justinian, A.D. 553? If so, we can well understand the restorations already referred to; and when Antoninus adds that the house of Rahab had now become a hospice and oratory, we might almost pronounce that this was the very hospice which had been restored by that emperor. Again, it may be asked, did Christian Jericho receive no injury from the [[Persian]] Romizan, the ferocious general of [[Chosroes]] II, A.D. 614? (Bar-Hebraei Chron. p. 99, Lat. 5, ed. Kirsch). </p> <p> It would rather seem that there were more religious edifices in the 7th than in the 6th century round about it. According to Arculfus, one church marked the site of Gilgal; another the spot where our Lord was supposed to have deposited his garments previously to his baptism; a third within the precincts of a vast monastery dedicated to John, situated upon some rising ground overlooking the Jordan. Jericho meanwhile had disappeared as a town to rise no more. Churches and monasteries sprung up around it on all sides, but only to smoulder away in their turn. The anchorite caves in the rocky flanks of the Quarentana are the most striking memorial that remains of early or mediaeval enthusiasm. Arculfus speaks of a diminutive race — [[Canaanites]] he calls them — that inhabited the plain in great numbers in his day. They have retained possession of those fairy meadowlands ever since and have made their headquarters for some centuries round the "square tower or castle" first mentioned by Willebrand (ap. Leon. Allat. Συμμικτ . p. 151) in A.D. 1211, when it was inhabited by the Saracens, whose work it may be supposed to have been, though it has since been dignified by the name of the house of Zacchaeus. Their village is by Brocardus (ap. Canis. ''Thesaur'' . 4, 16), in A.D. 1230, styled "a vile place;" by Sir J. Maundeville, in A.D. 1322, "a little village;" and by Henry Maundrell, in A.D. 1697, "a poor, nasty village;" in which verdict all modern travellers that have ever visited it must concur. (See ''Early Travels In Pal.'' by Wright, p. 177 and 451.) They are looked upon by the Arabs as a debased race and are probably nothing more or less than veritable Gypsies, who are still to be met with in the neighborhood of the Frank mountain near Jerusalem and on the heights round the village and convent of St. John in the desert and are still called "Scomunicati" by the native [[Christians]] one of the names applied to them when they first attracted notice in Europe in the 15th century (i.e. from feigning themselves "penitents" and under censure of the pope. See Hoyland's Historical Survey of the Gipsies, p. 18; also The Gipsy, a poem by A.P. Stanley). </p> <p> Jericho does not seem to have ever been restored as a town by the Crusaders; but its plains had not ceased to be prolific and were extensively cultivated and laid out in vineyards and gardens by the monks (Phocas ap. Leon. Allat. Συμμικτ . [c. 20], p. 31). They seem to have been included in the domains of the patriarchate of Jerusalem, and, as such, were bestowed by Arnulf upon his niece as a dowry (William of Tyre, ''Hist'' . 11, 15). Twenty-five years afterwards we find Melisendis, wife of king Fulco, assigning them to the convent of Bethany, which she had founded A.D. 1137. </p> <p> The site of ancient (the first) Jericho is with reason placed by Dr. Robinson (Bibl. Res. 1, 552-568) in the immediate neighborhood of the fountain of Elisha; and that of the second (the city of the New Test. and of Josephus) at the opening of the wady Kelt (Cherith), half an hour from the fountain. The ancient, and, indeed, the only practicable road from Jerusalem zigzags down the rugged and bare mountain side, close to the south bank of wady el-Kelt, one of the most sublime ravines in Palestine. In the plain, half a mile from the foot of the pass, and a short distance south of the present road, is an immense reservoir, now dry, and round it are extensive ruins, consisting of mounds of rubbish and ancient foundations. [[Riding]] northward, similar remains were seen on both sides of wady el-Kelt. Half a mile farther north we enter cultivated ground, interspersed with clumps of thorny nubk ("lote-tree") and other shrubs; another half mile brings us to Ain es-Sultâ n, a large fountain bursting forth from the foot of a mound. The water, though warm, is sweet, and is extensively used in the irrigation of the surrounding plain. The whole plain immediately around the fountain is strewn with ancient ruins and heaps of rubbish. </p> <p> The village traditionally identified with Jericho now bears the name of Riha (in Arabic er-Riha) and is situated about the middle of the plain, six miles west from the Jordan; in N. lat. 34° 57', and E. long. 35° 33'. Dr. Olin describes the present village as "the meanest and foulest of Palestine." It may perhaps contain forty dwellings, with some two hundred inhabitants. The houses consist of rough walls of old building stones, roofed with straw and brushwood. Each has in front of it an inclosure for cattle, fenced with branches of the thorny nubk; and a stronger fence of the same material surrounds the whole village, forming a rude barrier against the raids of the Bedawin. Not far from the village is a little square castle or tower, evidently of Saracenic origin, but now dignified by the title of "the house of Zacchaeus," This village, though it bears the name of Jericho, is about a mile and a half distant both from the Jericho of the prophets and that of the evangelists. Very probably it may occupy the site of [[Gilgal]] (q.v.). The ruinous state of the modern houses is in part owing to a comparatively recent event. Ibrahim Pasha, on his retreat from Damascus, near the close of 1840, having been attacked by the Arabs in crossing the Jordan, sent a detachment of his army and razed Jericho to the ground. </p> <p> The soil of the plain is unsurpassed in fertility; there is abundance of water for irrigation, and many of the old aqueducts are almost perfect; yet nearly the whole plain is waste and desolate. The grove supplied by the fountain is in the distance. The few fields of wheat and Indian corn, and the few orchards of figs, are enough to show what the place might become under proper cultivation. But the people are now few in number, indolent, and licentious. The palms which gave the ancient city a distinctive appellation are gone; even that "single solitary palm" which Dr. Robinson saw exists no more. The climate of Jericho is exceedingly hot and unhealthy. This is accounted for by the depression of the plain, which is about 1200 feet below the level of the sea. The reflection of the sun's rays from the bare white cliffs and mountain ranges which shut in the plain, and the noisome exhalations from the lake and from the numerous salt springs around it, are enough to poison the atmosphere. </p> <p> For further details respecting Jericho, see Reland's Paloest. p. 383, 829 sq.; Lightfoot, Hor. Heb. p. 85 sq.; Otho's Lex. Rabb. p. 298 sq.; Bachiene, 2, 3, § 224 sq.; Hamesveld, 2, 291 sq.; Cellar. Notit. 2, 552 sq.; Robinson's Researches, 2, 267 sq.; Olin's Travels, 2, 195 sq.; Thomson, Land and Book, 2, 439 sq. </p>
<p> (Heb. Yericho', '''''יְרַיחוֹ''''' , place of ''Fragrance'' , prob. from balsamous herbs growing there; &nbsp;Joshua 2:1-3; &nbsp;Joshua 3:16; &nbsp;Joshua 4:13; &nbsp;Joshua 4:19; &nbsp;Joshua 5:10; &nbsp;Joshua 5:13; &nbsp;Joshua 6:1-2; &nbsp;Joshua 6:25-26; &nbsp;Joshua 7:2; &nbsp;Joshua 8:2; &nbsp;Joshua 9:3; &nbsp;Joshua 10:1; &nbsp;Joshua 10:28; &nbsp;Joshua 10:30; &nbsp;Joshua 12:9; &nbsp;Joshua 13:32; &nbsp;Joshua 16:1; &nbsp;Joshua 16:7; &nbsp;Joshua 18:12; &nbsp;Joshua 18:21; &nbsp;Joshua 20:8; &nbsp;Joshua 24:11; &nbsp;2 Kings 2:4; &nbsp;2 Kings 2:15; &nbsp;2 Kings 2:18; also written '''''יְרֵחוֹ''''' , ''Yerecho'' ', &nbsp;Numbers 22:1; &nbsp;Numbers 26:3; &nbsp;Numbers 26:63; &nbsp;Numbers 31:12; &nbsp;Numbers 33:48; &nbsp;Numbers 33:50; &nbsp;Numbers 34:15; &nbsp;Numbers 35:1; &nbsp;Numbers 36:13; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:49; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:1; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:3; &nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5; &nbsp;2 Kings 25:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 6:78; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 19:5; &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:15; &nbsp;Ezra 2:34; &nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:36; &nbsp;Jeremiah 39:5; Jeremiah 52, 8; once '''''יְרַיחה''''' , ''Yerichoh'' ', &nbsp;1 Kings 16:34; Sept. and N.T. '''''Ι᾿Εριχώ''''' , Josephus '''''Ι᾿Εριχοῦς''''' [Genesis '''''Οῦντος''''' ]; Strabo, 16, 2, 41, '''''῾Ιερικοῦς''''' ; Ptolem. 5, 16, 7; '''''῾Ιερεικοῦς''''' ; Vulg. ''Jericho;'' Justin. ''Hierichus'' ), a city situated in a plain traversed by the Jordan and exactly over against where that river was crossed by the Israelites under Joshua (&nbsp;Joshua 3:16). It is first mentioned in connection with their approach to Palestine; they "pitched in the plains of Moab, on this side Jordan by Jericho" (&nbsp;Numbers 22:1). It was then a large and strong city and must have existed for a long period. The probability is that on the destruction of the cities of the plain by fire from heaven Jericho was founded, and perhaps by some who had resided nearer the scene of the catastrophe, but who abandoned their houses in fear. Had the city existed in the time of [[Abraham]] and Lot, it would scarcely have escaped notice when the latter looked down on the plain of Jordan from the heights of Bethel (Genesis 13). From the manner in which it is referred to, and the frequency with which it is mentioned, it was evidently the most important city in the Jordan valley at the time of the Exodus (&nbsp;Numbers 34:15; &nbsp;Numbers 31:12; &nbsp;Numbers 35:1, etc.). </p> <p> Such was either its vicinity or the extent of its territory that Gilgal, which formed their primary encampment, stood in its east border (&nbsp;Joshua 4:19). That it had a king is a very secondary consideration, for almost every small town had one (&nbsp;Joshua 12:9-24); in fact, monarchy was the only form of government known to those primitive times the government of the people of God presenting a marked exception to prevailing usage. But Jericho was further enclosed by walls '''''''''' a fenced city '''''''''' its walls were so considerable that at least one person (Rahab) had a house upon them (&nbsp;Joshua 2:15), and its gates were shut, as throughout the East still, "when it was dark" (&nbsp;Joshua 5:5). Again, the spoil that was found in it betokened its affluence '''''''''' Ai, Makkedah, Libnah, Lachish, Eglon, Hebron, Debir, and even Hazor, evidently contained nothing worth mentioning in comparison '''''''''' besides sheep, oxen, and asses, we hear of vessels of brass and iron. These possibly may have been the first fruits of those brass foundries "in the plain of Jordan" of which Solomon afterwards so largely availed himself (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 4:17). </p> <p> Silver and gold were found in such abundance that one man (Achan) could appropriate stealthily 200 shekels (100 oz. avoird.; see Lewis, ''Heb. Rep'' . 6, 57) of the former, and "a wedge of gold of 50 shekels (25 oz.) weight;" "a goodly [[Babylonish]] garment," purloined in the same dishonesty, may be adduced as evidence of a then- existing commerce between Jericho and the far East (&nbsp;Joshua 6:24; &nbsp;Joshua 7:21). In fact, its situation alone '''''''''' in so noble a plain and contiguous to so prolific a river '''''''''' would bespeak its importance in a country where these natural advantages have always been so highly prized and in an age when people depended so much more upon the indigenous resources of nature than they are compelled to do now. Jericho was the city to which the two spies were sent by Joshua from [[Shittim]] they were lodged in the house of Rahab the harlot upon the wall, and departed, having first promised to save her and all that were found in her house from destruction (&nbsp;Joshua 2:1-21). The account which the spies received from their hostess tended much to encourage the subsequent operations of the Israelites, as it showed that the inhabitants of the country were greatly alarmed at their advance, and the signal miracles which had marked their course from the Nile to the Jordan. </p> <p> The strange manner in which Jericho itself was taken (see Hacks, De ruina murorum Hierichuntiorun, Jena, 1690) must have strengthened this impression in the country, and appears, indeed, to have been designed for that effect. The town was utterly destroyed by the Israelites, who pronounced an awful curse upon whoever should rebuild it; and all the inhabitants were put to the sword, except Rahab and her family (Joshua 6). Her house was recognized by the scarlet line bound in the window from which the spies were let down, and she and her relatives were taken out of it, and "lodged without the camp;" but it is nowhere said or implied that her house escaped the general conflagration. That she "dwelt in Israel" for the future; that she married [[Salmon]] son of Naas-aon. "prince of the children of Judah," and had by him Boaz, the husband of Ruth and progenitor of David and of our Lord; and, lastly, that hers is the first and only [[Gentile]] name that appears in the list of the faithful of the O.T. given by Paul (&nbsp;Joshua 6:25; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 2:10; &nbsp;Matthew 1:5; &nbsp;Hebrews 11:31) all these facts surely indicate that she did not continue to inhabit the accursed site; and, if so, and in the absence of all direct evidence from Scripture, how could it ever have been inferred that her house was left standing? (See Hoffmann, ''Rahabs Erettung'' , Berl. 1861.) (See Rahab). </p> <p> Such as it had been left by Joshua, such it was bestowed by him upon the tribe of Benjamin (&nbsp;Joshua 18:21; it lay also on the border of [[Ephraim]] [&nbsp;Joshua 16:7]), and from this time a long interval elapses before Jericho appears again upon the scene. It is only incidentally mentioned in the life of David in connection with his embassy to the Ammonitish king (&nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5). The solemn manner in which its second foundation under Hiel the Bethelite is recorded '''''''''' upon whom the curse of Joshua is said to have descended in full force (&nbsp;1 Kings 16:34) '''''''''' would certainly seem to imply that up to that time its site had been uninhabited. It is true, mention is made of "a city of palm trees" (&nbsp;Judges 1:16; &nbsp;Judges 3:13) in existence apparently at the time when spoken of, and Jericho is twice '''''''''' once [[Before]] its first overthrow '''''''''' and once ''After'' its second foundation '''''''''' designated by that name (see &nbsp;Deuteronomy 34:3, and &nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:15); but these designations must be understood to apply only to the ''Site'' , in whatever condition at the time. (On the presence of these trees, see below.) However, once actually rebuilt, Jericho rose again slowly in importance. </p> <p> In its immediate vicinity the sons of the prophets sought retirement from the world and Elisha "healed the spring of the waters;" and over and against it, beyond Jordan, Elijah "went up by a whirlwind into heaven" (&nbsp;2 Kings 2:1-22). In its plains Zedekiah fell into the hands of the Chaldaeans (&nbsp;2 Kings 25:5; &nbsp;Jeremiah 39:5). By what may be called a retrospective account of it, we may infer that Hiel's restoration had not utterly failed, for in the return under Zerubbabel the "children of Jericho," 345 in number are comprised (Ezra 3:34; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:36); and it is even implied that they removed thither again, for the ''Men Of Jericho'' assisted Nehemiah in rebuilding that part of the wall of Jerusalem which was next to the sheep gate (&nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2). It was eventually fortified by the Syrian general Bacchides (&nbsp;1 [[Maccabees]] 9:50; Josephus, [[Ant]] . 13, 1, 3). </p> <p> The Jericho of the days of Josephus was distant 150 stadia from Jerusalem and sixty from the Jordan. It lay in a plain overhung by a barren mountain, whose roots ran northward towards Scythopolis and southward in the direction of [[Sodom]] and the Dead Sea. These formed the western boundaries of the plain. Eastward, its barriers were the mountains of Moab, which ran parallel to the former. In the midst of the plain '''''''''' the great plain, as it was called '''''''''' flowed the Jordan, and at the top and bottom of it were two lakes: Tiberias, proverbial for its sweetness, and Asphaltites for its bitterness. [[Away]] from the Jordan, it was parched and unhealthy during summer; but during winter, even when it snowed at Jerusalem, the inhabitants here wore linen garments. Hard by Jericho, bursting forth close to the site of the old city which Joshua took on his entrance into Canaan, was a most exuberant fountain, whose waters, before noted for their contrary properties, had received (proceeds Josephus) through Elisha's prayers their then wonderfully salutary and prolific efficacy. Within its range '''''''''' seventy stadia (Strabo says 100) by twenty '''''''''' the fertility of the soil was unexampled. [[Palms]] of various names and properties some that produced honey scarcely inferior to that of the neighborhood; opobalsamum, the choicest of indigenous fruits; cyprus (Arabic "el- henna"), and myrobalanum ("zukkum") throve there beautifully and thickly dotted about the pleasure grounds (War, 4, 8, 3). These and other aromatic shrubs were here of peculiar fragrance (Justin. 36:3; Josephus, Ant. 4, 6, 1; 14, 4, 1; 15, 4, 2; War, 1, 6, 6; 1, 18, 5). Wisdom herself did not disdain comparison with "the rose plants of Jericho" (&nbsp;Sirach 24:14). Well might Strabo (Geog. 16, 2, '''''§''''' 41, ed. Muller) conclude that its revenues were considerable. The peculiar productions mentioned, in addition to those noticed above, were honey (Cedren. p. 104) and, in later times, the sugar cane (see Robinson's Researches, 2, 290 sq.). (See [[Rose Of Jericho]]). </p> <p> By the Romans, Jericho was first visited under Pompey. He encamped there for a single night and subsequently destroyed two forts '''''''''' Threx and [[Taurus]] '''''''''' that commanded its approaches (Strabo, Geogr. '''''§''''' 40). [[Dagon]] (Josephus, War, 1, 2, 3) or [[Docus]] (&nbsp;1 Maccabees 16:15; comp. 9:50), where [[Ptolemy]] assassinated his father-in-law, Simon the Maccabee, may have been one of these strongholds, which were afterwards infested by bandits. Gabinius, in his resettlement of Judaea, made Jericho one of the five seats of assembly (Josephus, War, 1, 8, 5). With Herod the Great it rose to still greater prominence: it had been found full of treasure of all kinds; as in. the time of Joshua, so by his Roman allies who sacked it (ibid. 1, 15, 6); and its revenues were eagerly sought and rented by the wily tyrant from Cleopatra, to whom Antony had assigned them (Ant. 15, 4, 2). Not long afterwards he built a fort there, which he called "Cyprus," in honor of his mother (ibid. 16, 5); a tower, which he called, in honor of his brother, "Phasaelis;" and a number of new palaces, superior in their construction to those which had existed there previously, which he named after his friends. He even founded a new town higher up the plain, which he called, like the tower, [[Phasaelis]] ( War, 1, 21, 9). </p> <p> If he did not make Jericho his habitual residence, he at least retired thither to die and to be mourned, if he could have got his plan carried out; and it was in the amphitheater of Jericho that the news of his death was announced to the assembled soldiers and people by [[Salome]] (War, 1, 38, 8). Soon afterwards the place was burned and the town plundered by one Simon, a revolutionary that had been slave to Herod (Ant. 17, 10, 6); but Archelaus rebuilt the former sumptuously, founded a new town in the plain, that bore his own name, and, most important of all, diverted water from a village called Neaera to irrigate the plain, which he had planted with palms (Ant. 17, 13, 1). Thus Jericho was once more "a city of palms" when our Lord visited it. As the city that had so exceptionally contributed to his own ancestry as the city which had been the first to fall, amidst so much ceremony, before "the captain of the Lord's host and his servant Joshua" we may well suppose that his eyes surveyed it with unwonted interest. It is supposed to have been on the rocky heights overhanging it (hence called by tradition the Quarentana) that he was assailed by the tempter; and over against it, according to tradition likewise, he had been previously baptized in the Jordan. Here he restored sight to the blind (two certainly, perhaps three [&nbsp;Matthew 20:30; &nbsp;Mark 10:46]: this was in [[Leaving]] Jericho; Luke says "as he was ''Come [[Nigh]] Unto'' Jericho," etc. [&nbsp;Luke 18:35]). </p> <p> Here the descendant of Rahab did not disdain the hospitality of Zacchaeus the publican '''''''''' an office which was likely to be lucrative enough in so rich a city. Finally, between Jerusalem and Jericho was laid the scene of his story of the good Samaritan, which, if it is not to be regarded as a real occurrence throughout, at least derives interest from the fact that robbers have ever been the terror of that precipitous road (comp. Phocas, ch. 20; see Schubert, 3, 72); and so formidable had they proved only just before the Christian era that Pompey had been induced to undertake the destruction of their strongholds (Strabo, as before, 16, 2, '''''§''''' 40; comp. Joseph. Ant. 20:6, 1 sq.). The way from Jerusalem to Jericho is still described by travellers as the most dangerous about Palestine. (See Hackett's Illustra. of Script. p. 206.) As lately as 1820, an English traveller, Sir Frederick Henniker, was attacked on this road by the Arabs with firearms, who stripped him naked and left him severely wounded. </p> <p> Posterior to the Gospels, Vespasian found it one of the toparchies of [[Judaea]] (War, 3, 3, 5), but deserted by its inhabitants in a great measure when he encamped there (ibid. 4, 8, 2). He left a garrison on his departure (not necessarily the 10th legion, which is only stated to have marched through Jericho) which was still there when Titus advanced upon Jerusalem. Is it asked how Jericho was destroyed? [[Evidently]] by Vespasian; for Josephus, rightly understood, is not so silent as Dr. Robinson (Bibl. Res. 1, 566, 2d ed.) thinks. The city pillaged and burnt in Josephus (War 4, 9, 1) was clearly Jericho, with its adjacent villages, and not Gerasa, as may be seen at once by comparing the language there with that of 8, 2, and the agent was Vespasian. Eusebius and Jerome (Onomast. s.v.) say that it was destroyed when Jerusalem was besieged by the Romans. They further add that it was afterwards rebuilt '''''''''' they do not say by whom '''''''''' and still existed in their day; nor had the ruins of the two preceding cities been obliterated. [[Could]] [[Hadrian]] possibly have planted a colony there when he passed through Judaea and founded '''''Æ''''' lia? (Dion Cass. Hist. 669, c. 11, ed. Sturz; more at large Chronicles Paschal. p. 254, ed. Da Fresne.) The discovery which [[Origen]] made there of a version of the O.T. (the 5th in his Hexapla), together with sundry MSS. Greek and Hebrew, suggests that it could not have been wholly without inhabitants (Euseb. E. H. 6, 16; Epiphan. Lib. de Pond. et Menesur. circa med.); or again, as is perhaps more probable, did a Christian settlement arise there under Constantine, when baptisms in the Jordan began to be the rage? That Jericho became an episcopal see about that time under Jerusalem appears from more than one ancient [[Notitia]] (Geograph. S. a Carolo Paulo, p. 306, and the Parergon appended to it; comp. [[William]] of Tyre, Hist. lib. 23, ad f.). Its bishops subscribed to various councils in the 4th, 5th, and 6th centuries (ibid. and Le Quien's Oriens Christian. 3, 654). </p> <p> Justinian, we are told, restored a hospice there, and likewise a church dedicated to the [[Virgin]] (Procop. De ''Oedif.'' 5, 9). As early as A.D. 337, when the [[Bordeaux]] pilgrim (ed. Wesseling) visited it, a house existed there which was pointed out, after the manner of those days, as the house of Rahab. This was roofless when Arculfts saw it; and not only so, but the third city was likewise in ruins (Adamn. De Locis S. ap. Migane, Patrolog. C. 88, 799). Had Jericho been visited by an earthquake, as [[Antoninus]] reports (ap. Ugoilini Thesaur. 7, p. 1213, and note to c. 3), and as Syria certainly was, in the 27th year of Justinian, A.D. 553? If so, we can well understand the restorations already referred to; and when Antoninus adds that the house of Rahab had now become a hospice and oratory, we might almost pronounce that this was the very hospice which had been restored by that emperor. Again, it may be asked, did Christian Jericho receive no injury from the [[Persian]] Romizan, the ferocious general of [[Chosroes]] II, A.D. 614? (Bar-Hebraei Chron. p. 99, Lat. 5, ed. Kirsch). </p> <p> It would rather seem that there were more religious edifices in the 7th than in the 6th century round about it. According to Arculfus, one church marked the site of Gilgal; another the spot where our Lord was supposed to have deposited his garments previously to his baptism; a third within the precincts of a vast monastery dedicated to John, situated upon some rising ground overlooking the Jordan. Jericho meanwhile had disappeared as a town to rise no more. Churches and monasteries sprung up around it on all sides, but only to smoulder away in their turn. The anchorite caves in the rocky flanks of the Quarentana are the most striking memorial that remains of early or mediaeval enthusiasm. Arculfus speaks of a diminutive race '''''''''' [[Canaanites]] he calls them '''''''''' that inhabited the plain in great numbers in his day. They have retained possession of those fairy meadowlands ever since and have made their headquarters for some centuries round the "square tower or castle" first mentioned by Willebrand (ap. Leon. Allat. '''''Συμμικτ''''' . p. 151) in A.D. 1211, when it was inhabited by the Saracens, whose work it may be supposed to have been, though it has since been dignified by the name of the house of Zacchaeus. Their village is by Brocardus (ap. Canis. ''Thesaur'' . 4, 16), in A.D. 1230, styled "a vile place;" by Sir J. Maundeville, in A.D. 1322, "a little village;" and by Henry Maundrell, in A.D. 1697, "a poor, nasty village;" in which verdict all modern travellers that have ever visited it must concur. (See ''Early Travels In Pal.'' by Wright, p. 177 and 451.) They are looked upon by the Arabs as a debased race and are probably nothing more or less than veritable Gypsies, who are still to be met with in the neighborhood of the Frank mountain near Jerusalem and on the heights round the village and convent of St. John in the desert and are still called "Scomunicati" by the native [[Christians]] one of the names applied to them when they first attracted notice in Europe in the 15th century (i.e. from feigning themselves "penitents" and under censure of the pope. See Hoyland's Historical Survey of the Gipsies, p. 18; also The Gipsy, a poem by A.P. Stanley). </p> <p> Jericho does not seem to have ever been restored as a town by the Crusaders; but its plains had not ceased to be prolific and were extensively cultivated and laid out in vineyards and gardens by the monks (Phocas ap. Leon. Allat. '''''Συμμικτ''''' . [c. 20], p. 31). They seem to have been included in the domains of the patriarchate of Jerusalem, and, as such, were bestowed by Arnulf upon his niece as a dowry (William of Tyre, ''Hist'' . 11, 15). Twenty-five years afterwards we find Melisendis, wife of king Fulco, assigning them to the convent of Bethany, which she had founded A.D. 1137. </p> <p> The site of ancient (the first) Jericho is with reason placed by Dr. Robinson (Bibl. Res. 1, 552-568) in the immediate neighborhood of the fountain of Elisha; and that of the second (the city of the New Test. and of Josephus) at the opening of the wady Kelt (Cherith), half an hour from the fountain. The ancient, and, indeed, the only practicable road from Jerusalem zigzags down the rugged and bare mountain side, close to the south bank of wady el-Kelt, one of the most sublime ravines in Palestine. In the plain, half a mile from the foot of the pass, and a short distance south of the present road, is an immense reservoir, now dry, and round it are extensive ruins, consisting of mounds of rubbish and ancient foundations. [[Riding]] northward, similar remains were seen on both sides of wady el-Kelt. Half a mile farther north we enter cultivated ground, interspersed with clumps of thorny nubk ("lote-tree") and other shrubs; another half mile brings us to Ain es-Sult '''''Â''''' n, a large fountain bursting forth from the foot of a mound. The water, though warm, is sweet, and is extensively used in the irrigation of the surrounding plain. The whole plain immediately around the fountain is strewn with ancient ruins and heaps of rubbish. </p> <p> The village traditionally identified with Jericho now bears the name of Riha (in Arabic er-Riha) and is situated about the middle of the plain, six miles west from the Jordan; in N. lat. 34 '''''°''''' 57', and E. long. 35 '''''°''''' 33'. Dr. Olin describes the present village as "the meanest and foulest of Palestine." It may perhaps contain forty dwellings, with some two hundred inhabitants. The houses consist of rough walls of old building stones, roofed with straw and brushwood. Each has in front of it an inclosure for cattle, fenced with branches of the thorny nubk; and a stronger fence of the same material surrounds the whole village, forming a rude barrier against the raids of the Bedawin. Not far from the village is a little square castle or tower, evidently of Saracenic origin, but now dignified by the title of "the house of Zacchaeus," This village, though it bears the name of Jericho, is about a mile and a half distant both from the Jericho of the prophets and that of the evangelists. Very probably it may occupy the site of [[Gilgal]] (q.v.). The ruinous state of the modern houses is in part owing to a comparatively recent event. Ibrahim Pasha, on his retreat from Damascus, near the close of 1840, having been attacked by the Arabs in crossing the Jordan, sent a detachment of his army and razed Jericho to the ground. </p> <p> The soil of the plain is unsurpassed in fertility; there is abundance of water for irrigation, and many of the old aqueducts are almost perfect; yet nearly the whole plain is waste and desolate. The grove supplied by the fountain is in the distance. The few fields of wheat and Indian corn, and the few orchards of figs, are enough to show what the place might become under proper cultivation. But the people are now few in number, indolent, and licentious. The palms which gave the ancient city a distinctive appellation are gone; even that "single solitary palm" which Dr. Robinson saw exists no more. The climate of Jericho is exceedingly hot and unhealthy. This is accounted for by the depression of the plain, which is about 1200 feet below the level of the sea. The reflection of the sun's rays from the bare white cliffs and mountain ranges which shut in the plain, and the noisome exhalations from the lake and from the numerous salt springs around it, are enough to poison the atmosphere. </p> <p> For further details respecting Jericho, see Reland's Paloest. p. 383, 829 sq.; Lightfoot, Hor. Heb. p. 85 sq.; Otho's Lex. Rabb. p. 298 sq.; Bachiene, 2, 3, '''''§''''' 224 sq.; Hamesveld, 2, 291 sq.; Cellar. Notit. 2, 552 sq.; Robinson's Researches, 2, 267 sq.; Olin's Travels, 2, 195 sq.; Thomson, Land and Book, 2, 439 sq. </p>
          
          
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_5409" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_5409" /> ==
<p> ''''' jer´i ''''' - ''''' kō ''''' (the word occurs in two forms. In the Pentateuch, in &nbsp; 2 Kings 25:5 and in Ezra, Nehemiah, Chronicles it is written ירחו , <i> '''''yerēḥō''''' </i> ; יריחו , <i> '''''yerı̄ḥō''''' </i> , elsewhere): In &nbsp;1 Kings 16:34 the final [[Hebrew]] letter is <i> '''''hē''''' </i> (ה , h), instead of <i> '''''wāw''''' </i> (ו , w). The termination <i> '''''wāw''''' </i> (ו , w) thought to preserve the peculiarities of the old Canaanite. dialect. In the [[Septuagint]] we have the indeclinable form, Ἰεριχώ , <i> '''''Ierichō̇''''' </i> (Swete has the form <i> '''''Iereichō''''' </i> as well), both with and without the feminine article; in the New Testament Ἰερειχώ , <i> '''''Iereichō̇''''' </i> , once with the feminine article The Arabic is <i> '''''er''''' </i> - <i> '''''Riha''''' </i> . According to &nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:49 it stood opposite Nebo, while in &nbsp; Deuteronomy 34:3 it is called a city grove of palm trees. It was surrounded with a wall (&nbsp; Joshua 2:15 ), and provided with a gate which was closed at night (&nbsp;Joshua 2:5 ), an d was ruled over by a king. When captured, vessels of brass and iron, large quantities of silver and gold, and "a goodly Babylonish garment" were found in it (&nbsp;Joshua 7:21 ). It was on the western side of the Jordan, not far from the camp of Israel at Shittim, before crossing the river (&nbsp;Joshua 2:1 ). The city was on the "plains" (&nbsp;Joshua 4:13 ), but so close to "the mountain" on the West (probably the cliffs of Quarantania, the traditional scene of Christ's temptation) that it was within easy reach of the spies, protected by Rahab. It was in the lot of Benjamin (&nbsp;Joshua 18:21 ), the border of which ascended to the "slope (English versions of the Bible "side") of Jeremiah on the North" (&nbsp;Joshua 18:12 ). [[Authorities]] are generally agreed in locating the ancient city at <i> '''''Tel es''''' </i> - <i> '''''Sultān''''' </i> , a mile and a half Northwest of modern Jericho. Here there is a mound 1,200 ft. long and 50 ft. in height supporting 4 smaller mounds, the highest of which is 90 ft. above the base of the main mound. </p> <p> The geological situation (see [[Jordan Valley]] ) sheds great light upon the capture of the city by Joshua (&nbsp;Joshua 6 ). If the city was built as we suppose it to have been, upon the unconsolidated sedimentary deposits which accumulated to a great depth in the Jordan valley during the enlargement of the Dead Sea, which took place in Pleistocene (or glacial) times, the sudden falling of the walls becomes easily credible to anyone who believes in the personality of God and in His power either to foreknow the future or to direct at His will the secondary causes with which man has to deal in Nature. The narrative does not state that the blowing of the rams' horns of themselves effected the falling of the walls. It was simply said that at a specified juncture on the 7th day the walls would fall, and that they actually fell at that juncture. The miracle may, therefore, be regarded as either that of prophecy, in which the [[Creator]] by foretelling the course of things to Joshua, secured the junction of [[Divine]] and human activities which constitutes a true miracle, or we may regard the movements which brought down the walls to be the result of direct Divine action, such as is exerted by man when be produces an explosion of dynamite at a particular time and place. The phenomena are just such as occurred in the earthquake of San Francisco in 1906, where, according to the report of the scientific commission appointed by the state, "the most violent destruction of buildings was on the made ground. This ground seems to have behaved during the earthquake very much in the same way as jelly in a bowl, or as a semi-liquid in a tank." Santa Rosa, situated on the valley floor, "underlain to a considerable depth by loose or slightly coherent geological formations,... 20 miles from the rift, was the most severely shaken town in the state and suffered the greatest disaster relatively to its population and extent" ( <i> [[Report]] </i> , 13,15). Thus an earthquake, such as is easily provided for along the margin of this great Jordan crevasse, would produce exactly the phenomena here described, and its occurrence at the time and place foretold to Joshua constitutes it a miracle of the first magnitude. </p> <p> Notwithstanding the curse pronounced in &nbsp;Joshua 6:26 the King James Version, prophesying that whosoever should rebuild the city "he shall lay the foundations thereof in his firstborn," it was rebuilt (&nbsp; 1 Kings 16:34 ) by Hiel the Bethelite in the days of Ahab. The curse was literally fulfilled. Still David's messengers are said to have "tarried at Jericho" in his day (&nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 19:5 ). In Elisha's time (&nbsp;2 Kings 2:5 ) there was a school of prophets there, while several other references to the city occur in the Old Testament and the [[Apocrypha]] (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:15 , where it is called "the city of palmtrees"; &nbsp;2 Kings 25:5; &nbsp;Jeremiah 39:5; &nbsp;Ezra 2:34; &nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:36; 1 Macc 9:50). Josephus describes it and the fertile plain surrounding it, in glowing terms. In the time of Christ, it was an important place yielding a large revenue to the royal family. But the city which Herod rebuilt was on a higher elevation, at the base of the western mountain, probably at <i> '''''Beit Jubr''''' </i> , where there are the ruins of a small fort. Jericho was the place of rendezvous for [[Galilean]] pilgrims desiring to avoid Samaria, both in going to and in departing from Jerusalem, and it has been visited at all times by thousands of pilgrims, who go down from Jerusalem to bathe in the Jordan. The road leading from Jerusalem to Jericho is still infested by robbers who hide in the rocky caverns adjoining it, and appear without warning from the tributary gorges of the wadies which dissect the mountain wall. At the present time Jericho and the region about is occupied only by a few hundred miserable inhabitants, deteriorated by the torrid climate which prevails at the low level about the head of the Dead Sea. But the present barrenness of the region is largely due to the destruction of the aqueducts which formerly distributed over the plain the waters brought down through the wadies which descend from the mountains of Judea. The ruins of many of these are silent witnesses of the cause of its decay. Twelve aqueducts at various levels formerly branched from the <i> '''''Wâdy Kelt''''' </i> , irrigating the plain both North and South. Remains of Roman masonry are found in these. In the Middle Ages they were so repaired that an abundance and variety of crops were raised, including wheat, barley, millet, figs, grapes and sugar cane. See further Palestine (RECENT Exploration ). </p>
<p> ''''' jer´i ''''' - ''''' kō ''''' (the word occurs in two forms. In the Pentateuch, in &nbsp; 2 Kings 25:5 and in Ezra, Nehemiah, Chronicles it is written ירחו , <i> ''''' yerēḥō ''''' </i> ; יריחו , <i> ''''' yerı̄ḥō ''''' </i> , elsewhere): In &nbsp;1 Kings 16:34 the final [[Hebrew]] letter is <i> ''''' hē ''''' </i> (ה , h), instead of <i> ''''' wāw ''''' </i> (ו , w). The termination <i> ''''' wāw ''''' </i> (ו , w) thought to preserve the peculiarities of the old Canaanite. dialect. In the [[Septuagint]] we have the indeclinable form, Ἰεριχώ , <i> ''''' Ierichō̇ ''''' </i> (Swete has the form <i> ''''' Iereichō ''''' </i> as well), both with and without the feminine article; in the New Testament Ἰερειχώ , <i> ''''' Iereichō̇ ''''' </i> , once with the feminine article The Arabic is <i> ''''' er ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Riha ''''' </i> . According to &nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:49 it stood opposite Nebo, while in &nbsp; Deuteronomy 34:3 it is called a city grove of palm trees. It was surrounded with a wall (&nbsp; Joshua 2:15 ), and provided with a gate which was closed at night (&nbsp;Joshua 2:5 ), an d was ruled over by a king. When captured, vessels of brass and iron, large quantities of silver and gold, and "a goodly Babylonish garment" were found in it (&nbsp;Joshua 7:21 ). It was on the western side of the Jordan, not far from the camp of Israel at Shittim, before crossing the river (&nbsp;Joshua 2:1 ). The city was on the "plains" (&nbsp;Joshua 4:13 ), but so close to "the mountain" on the West (probably the cliffs of Quarantania, the traditional scene of Christ's temptation) that it was within easy reach of the spies, protected by Rahab. It was in the lot of Benjamin (&nbsp;Joshua 18:21 ), the border of which ascended to the "slope (English versions of the Bible "side") of Jeremiah on the North" (&nbsp;Joshua 18:12 ). [[Authorities]] are generally agreed in locating the ancient city at <i> ''''' Tel es ''''' </i> - <i> ''''' Sultān ''''' </i> , a mile and a half Northwest of modern Jericho. Here there is a mound 1,200 ft. long and 50 ft. in height supporting 4 smaller mounds, the highest of which is 90 ft. above the base of the main mound. </p> <p> The geological situation (see [[Jordan Valley]] ) sheds great light upon the capture of the city by Joshua (&nbsp;Joshua 6 ). If the city was built as we suppose it to have been, upon the unconsolidated sedimentary deposits which accumulated to a great depth in the Jordan valley during the enlargement of the Dead Sea, which took place in Pleistocene (or glacial) times, the sudden falling of the walls becomes easily credible to anyone who believes in the personality of God and in His power either to foreknow the future or to direct at His will the secondary causes with which man has to deal in Nature. The narrative does not state that the blowing of the rams' horns of themselves effected the falling of the walls. It was simply said that at a specified juncture on the 7th day the walls would fall, and that they actually fell at that juncture. The miracle may, therefore, be regarded as either that of prophecy, in which the [[Creator]] by foretelling the course of things to Joshua, secured the junction of [[Divine]] and human activities which constitutes a true miracle, or we may regard the movements which brought down the walls to be the result of direct Divine action, such as is exerted by man when be produces an explosion of dynamite at a particular time and place. The phenomena are just such as occurred in the earthquake of San Francisco in 1906, where, according to the report of the scientific commission appointed by the state, "the most violent destruction of buildings was on the made ground. This ground seems to have behaved during the earthquake very much in the same way as jelly in a bowl, or as a semi-liquid in a tank." Santa Rosa, situated on the valley floor, "underlain to a considerable depth by loose or slightly coherent geological formations,... 20 miles from the rift, was the most severely shaken town in the state and suffered the greatest disaster relatively to its population and extent" ( <i> [[Report]] </i> , 13,15). Thus an earthquake, such as is easily provided for along the margin of this great Jordan crevasse, would produce exactly the phenomena here described, and its occurrence at the time and place foretold to Joshua constitutes it a miracle of the first magnitude. </p> <p> Notwithstanding the curse pronounced in &nbsp;Joshua 6:26 the King James Version, prophesying that whosoever should rebuild the city "he shall lay the foundations thereof in his firstborn," it was rebuilt (&nbsp; 1 Kings 16:34 ) by Hiel the Bethelite in the days of Ahab. The curse was literally fulfilled. Still David's messengers are said to have "tarried at Jericho" in his day (&nbsp;2 Samuel 10:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 19:5 ). In Elisha's time (&nbsp;2 Kings 2:5 ) there was a school of prophets there, while several other references to the city occur in the Old Testament and the [[Apocrypha]] (&nbsp;2 Chronicles 28:15 , where it is called "the city of palmtrees"; &nbsp;2 Kings 25:5; &nbsp;Jeremiah 39:5; &nbsp;Ezra 2:34; &nbsp;Nehemiah 3:2; &nbsp;Nehemiah 7:36; 1 Macc 9:50). Josephus describes it and the fertile plain surrounding it, in glowing terms. In the time of Christ, it was an important place yielding a large revenue to the royal family. But the city which Herod rebuilt was on a higher elevation, at the base of the western mountain, probably at <i> ''''' Beit Jubr ''''' </i> , where there are the ruins of a small fort. Jericho was the place of rendezvous for [[Galilean]] pilgrims desiring to avoid Samaria, both in going to and in departing from Jerusalem, and it has been visited at all times by thousands of pilgrims, who go down from Jerusalem to bathe in the Jordan. The road leading from Jerusalem to Jericho is still infested by robbers who hide in the rocky caverns adjoining it, and appear without warning from the tributary gorges of the wadies which dissect the mountain wall. At the present time Jericho and the region about is occupied only by a few hundred miserable inhabitants, deteriorated by the torrid climate which prevails at the low level about the head of the Dead Sea. But the present barrenness of the region is largely due to the destruction of the aqueducts which formerly distributed over the plain the waters brought down through the wadies which descend from the mountains of Judea. The ruins of many of these are silent witnesses of the cause of its decay. Twelve aqueducts at various levels formerly branched from the <i> ''''' Wâdy Kelt ''''' </i> , irrigating the plain both North and South. Remains of Roman masonry are found in these. In the Middle Ages they were so repaired that an abundance and variety of crops were raised, including wheat, barley, millet, figs, grapes and sugar cane. See further Palestine (RECENT Exploration ). </p>
          
          
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_75340" /> ==
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_75340" /> ==