Difference between revisions of "Hall"

From BiblePortal Wikipedia
(Created page with "Hall <ref name="term_4596" /> <p> ''''' hôl ''''' ( Luke 22:55 the King James Version). See House . </p> ==References == <references> <ref name="term_4596"> [https://biblepo...")
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Hall <ref name="term_4596" />  
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_31874" /> ==
<p> ''''' hôl ''''' ( Luke 22:55 the King James Version). See House . </p>
[[Luke]] 22:55Matthew 26:69 [[Mark]] 14:66 [[John]] 10:1,16 [[Matthew]] 27:27 Mark 15:16 Matthew 26:71
       
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35738" /> ==
<p> Hebrew: aulee , the "court" or "uncovered space", on a lower level than the lowest floor, in the midst of a house, as the high priest's (Luke 22:55). The "porch" (proaulion ) was the vestibule leading to it (Mark 14:68). [[Also]] called puloon , the "gate" or "porch" (Matthew 26:71). </p>
       
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_40844" /> ==
1 Kings 6:331 Kings 7:61 Kings 7:7Esther 5:1 <p> [[Banqueting]] halls are frequently mentioned. The hall of 1 [[Samuel]] 9:22 (KJV parlour) was a chamber connected with the sanctuary where sacrificial meat was eaten. Belshazzar's banqueting hall (KJV banquet house) was the scene of the famous handwriting on the wall ( [[Daniel]] 5:10 ). This room was likely the large throne room (50 by 160 feet) which has been excavated. </p> <p> KJV used the term hall to translate the [[Greek]] term <i> aule </i> ( [[Luke]] 22:55 ). [[Elsewhere]] KJV translated the term “palace” (for example [[Matthew]] 26:58; [[Mark]] 14:54; [[John]] 18:15 ). [[Modern]] translations use “courtyard.” KJV also used hall for the praetorium or [[Roman]] governor's headquarters (Pilate's Matthew 27:27; Mark 15:16; John 18:28; Herod's Acts 23:35 ). </p>
       
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_51601" /> ==
<p> <strong> HALL </strong> . [[See]] Prætorium. </p>
       
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_56058" /> ==
<p> <b> HALL. </b> —‘Hall’ appears in the [[Authorized]] [[Version]] in a way to cause not a little confusion, as translation sometimes of αὐλή and sometimes of πραιτώριον. [[In]] [[Matthew]] 27:27 Authorized Version has ‘the soldiers of the governor took [[Jesus]] into <i> the common hall </i> ’ (a circumlocution for πραιτώριον). In [[Mark]] 15:15 Authorized Version has ‘into <i> the hall called [[Praetorium]] </i> ,’ as translation of law ἔσω τῆς αὐλῆς ὅ ἐστιν πραιτώριον. [[Revised]] Version NT 1881, OT 1885 has not entirely relieved this confusion. The [[English]] Revisers render πραιτώριον by ‘palace,’ following Rhem. [Note: [[Rhemish]] NT 1582.] ; while the [[American]] Revisers, more literally, give <i> praetorium </i> , the [[Latin]] word which was carried over, transliterated, into the Greek, and which denoted originally the praetor’s tent or abode, or the general’s headquarters. Tindale introduced ‘judgement-hall’ for πραιτώριον, and is followed by Authorized Version in [[John]] 18:28; John 18:33; John 19:9 etc. The Authorized Version renders αὐλή by ‘palace’ in Matthew 26:3; Matthew 26:58; Matthew 26:69, Mark 14:54; Mark 14:66, [[Luke]] 11:21, John 18:15, when the reference is to the place where the governor dispensed justice; by ‘fold’ in John 10:1; John 10:16 of the place where the sheep were kept at night; and by ‘court’ in [[Revelation]] 11:2, as designating the court of the temple. Revised Version NT 1881, OT 1885 more consistently renders αὐλή by ‘court’ instead of ‘palace,’ everywhere except in John 10:1 ἡ αὐλὴ τῶν προβάτων, where it has ‘the fold of the sheep’ (cf. Authorized Version ‘sheepfold’), and in John 10:16, where it has simply ‘fold.’ Cf. Matthew 26:3; Matthew 26:58; Matthew 26:69, where the inner court of the high priest’s official residence seems to be meant; in Matthew 26:69 ‘Peter sat without in the palace’ (Authorized Version); ‘without’ stands in contrast with the audience-room in which Jesus was appearing before the authorities, <i> i.e. </i> [[Peter]] was not in the room of the official residence where the trial was going on, but out in the open court, around which the house was built; and this was ‘beneath,’ or on a lower level than the audience-room. [[See]] also Court, Praetorium. </p> <p> Geo. B. Eager. </p>
       
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_60643" /> ==
<p> HALL, n. L. aula Heb. a tent, a palace. </p> 1. [[In]] architecture, a large room at the entrance of a house or palace. In the houses of ministers of state, magistrates, &c.,it is the place where they give audience and dispatch business. 2. An edifice in which courts of justice are held as [[Westminster]] Hall, which was originally a royal palace,the kings of [[England]] formerly holding their parliaments and courts of judicature in their own dwellings, as is still the practice in Spain. 3. A manor-house, in which courts were formerly held. 4. A college, or large edifice belonging to a collegiate institution. 5. A room for a corporation or public assembly as a town-hall Fanueil [[Hall]] in Boston, &c. 6. A collegiate body in the universities of [[Oxford]] and Cambridge.
       
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_72866" /> ==
<p> Hall. [[Used]] of the court of the high priest's house. [[Luke]] 22:55. [[In]] [[Matthew]] 27:27 and [[Mark]] 15:16, "hall" is synonymous with "praetorium", which in [[John]] 18:28 is, in the [[Authorized]] Version, "judgment hall". </p>
       
== Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words <ref name="term_77950" /> ==
<div> 1: Αὐλή <div> ► </div> (Strong'S #833 — [[Noun]] [[Feminine]] — aule — ow-lay' ) </div> <p> "a court," most frequently the place where a governor dispensed justice, is rendered "hall" in [[Mark]] 15:16; [[Luke]] 22:55 , AV (RV, "court"). [[See]] [[Court]] , [[Fold]] , Palace. </p> <div> 2: Πραιτώριον <div> ► </div> (Strong'S #4232 — Noun [[Neuter]] — praitorion — prahee-to'-ree-on ) </div> <p> is translated "common hall" in [[Matthew]] 27:27 , AV (RV, "palace"); "Praetorium" in Mark 15:16; "hall of judgment" or "judgment hall" in [[John]] 18:28,33; 19:9; Acts 23:35 (RV, "palace," in each place); "praetorian guard," Philippians 1:13 (AV, "palace"). See Palace. </p>
       
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_4596" /> ==
<p> ''''' hôl ''''' ( [[Luke]] 22:55 the [[King]] [[James]] Version). [[See]] [[House]] . </p>
       
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_42885" /> ==
<p> occurs in the A.V. of the N.T. three times; twice (Matthew 27:27; [[Mark]] 15:16) in reference to the πραίτωριον , praetorium, or residence of the [[Roman]] governor at Jerusalem, which was either the palace built by the elder Herod, or the tower of Antonia; his usual abode was at Csesarea (Acts 23:23). Mark adds to the word αὐλή, as he is wont in other cases, an explanatory phrase, ὅ ἐστι πραιτώριον (Vulg. atrium praetorii). [[In]] [[Luke]] 22:55, αύλή) means the open court or quadrangle belonging to the high priest's house, such as was common to [[Oriental]] dwellings. It has the same meaning in [[Matthew]] 26:69, and Mark 14:66, and in both passages is incorrectly rendered "palace" in the A.V., as the adverbs ἔξω and κάτω plainly distinguish the αύλή from the οῖκος to which it was attached (Luke 22:54). [[So]] in Luke 11:21. In [[John]] 10:1; John 10:16, it means a "sheep-fold," and in [[Revelation]] 11:2, the outer "court" of the Temple. The αὐλή was entered from the street by a προαύλιον or vestibule (Mark 14:68), through a πυλών or portal (Matthew 26:71), in which was a θύρα or wicket (John 18:16; Acts 12:13). — Kitto. s.v. Αὐλή is the equivalent for חָצֵר, an enclosed or fortified space (Gesenius, Tesaur. p. 512), in many places in the O.T. where the Vulg. and A. Vers. have respectively villa or viculus, "village," or atritum," court," chiefly of the tabernacle or Temple. [[See]] Coar. The hall or court of a house or palace would probably be an enclosed but uncovered space, implucium, on a lower level than the apartments of the lowest floor which looked into it. (See [[House]]). </p>
       
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_74482" /> ==
<p> nglish lawyer and historian, born in London; studied law at Gray's Inn; in 1540 he became one of the judges of the Sheriff's Court; his fame rests on his history "The [[Union]] of the [[Two]] [[Noble]] [[Families]] of [[Lancaster]] and Yorke," a work which sheds a flood of light on contemporary events, and is, moreover, a noble specimen of [[English]] prose (1499-1547). </p>
       
==References ==
==References ==
<references>
<references>
<ref name="term_31874"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/easton-s-bible-dictionary/hall Hall from Easton's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_35738"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/fausset-s-bible-dictionary/hall Hall from Fausset's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_40844"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/holman-bible-dictionary/hall Hall from Holman Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_51601"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-bible/hall Hall from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_56058"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-new-testament/hall Hall from Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_60643"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/king-james-dictionary/hall Hall from King James Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_72866"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/smith-s-bible-dictionary/hall Hall from Smith's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_77950"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/vine-s-expository-dictionary-of-nt-words/hall Hall from Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_4596"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/international-standard-bible-encyclopedia/hall Hall from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia]</ref>
<ref name="term_4596"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/international-standard-bible-encyclopedia/hall Hall from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_42885"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/hall Hall from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_74482"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/hall Hall from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
       
</references>
</references>

Revision as of 21:13, 11 October 2021

Easton's Bible Dictionary [1]

Luke 22:55Matthew 26:69 Mark 14:66 John 10:1,16 Matthew 27:27 Mark 15:16 Matthew 26:71

Fausset's Bible Dictionary [2]

Hebrew: aulee , the "court" or "uncovered space", on a lower level than the lowest floor, in the midst of a house, as the high priest's (Luke 22:55). The "porch" (proaulion ) was the vestibule leading to it (Mark 14:68). Also called puloon , the "gate" or "porch" (Matthew 26:71).

Holman Bible Dictionary [3]

1 Kings 6:331 Kings 7:61 Kings 7:7Esther 5:1

Banqueting halls are frequently mentioned. The hall of 1 Samuel 9:22 (KJV parlour) was a chamber connected with the sanctuary where sacrificial meat was eaten. Belshazzar's banqueting hall (KJV banquet house) was the scene of the famous handwriting on the wall ( Daniel 5:10 ). This room was likely the large throne room (50 by 160 feet) which has been excavated.

KJV used the term hall to translate the Greek term aule ( Luke 22:55 ). Elsewhere KJV translated the term “palace” (for example Matthew 26:58; Mark 14:54; John 18:15 ). Modern translations use “courtyard.” KJV also used hall for the praetorium or Roman governor's headquarters (Pilate's Matthew 27:27; Mark 15:16; John 18:28; Herod's Acts 23:35 ).

Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [4]

HALL . See Prætorium.

Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament [5]

HALL. —‘Hall’ appears in the Authorized Version in a way to cause not a little confusion, as translation sometimes of αὐλή and sometimes of πραιτώριον. In Matthew 27:27 Authorized Version has ‘the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the common hall ’ (a circumlocution for πραιτώριον). In Mark 15:15 Authorized Version has ‘into the hall called Praetorium ,’ as translation of law ἔσω τῆς αὐλῆς ὅ ἐστιν πραιτώριον. Revised Version NT 1881, OT 1885 has not entirely relieved this confusion. The English Revisers render πραιτώριον by ‘palace,’ following Rhem. [Note: Rhemish NT 1582.] ; while the American Revisers, more literally, give praetorium , the Latin word which was carried over, transliterated, into the Greek, and which denoted originally the praetor’s tent or abode, or the general’s headquarters. Tindale introduced ‘judgement-hall’ for πραιτώριον, and is followed by Authorized Version in John 18:28; John 18:33; John 19:9 etc. The Authorized Version renders αὐλή by ‘palace’ in Matthew 26:3; Matthew 26:58; Matthew 26:69, Mark 14:54; Mark 14:66, Luke 11:21, John 18:15, when the reference is to the place where the governor dispensed justice; by ‘fold’ in John 10:1; John 10:16 of the place where the sheep were kept at night; and by ‘court’ in Revelation 11:2, as designating the court of the temple. Revised Version NT 1881, OT 1885 more consistently renders αὐλή by ‘court’ instead of ‘palace,’ everywhere except in John 10:1 ἡ αὐλὴ τῶν προβάτων, where it has ‘the fold of the sheep’ (cf. Authorized Version ‘sheepfold’), and in John 10:16, where it has simply ‘fold.’ Cf. Matthew 26:3; Matthew 26:58; Matthew 26:69, where the inner court of the high priest’s official residence seems to be meant; in Matthew 26:69 ‘Peter sat without in the palace’ (Authorized Version); ‘without’ stands in contrast with the audience-room in which Jesus was appearing before the authorities, i.e. Peter was not in the room of the official residence where the trial was going on, but out in the open court, around which the house was built; and this was ‘beneath,’ or on a lower level than the audience-room. See also Court, Praetorium.

Geo. B. Eager.

King James Dictionary [6]

HALL, n. L. aula Heb. a tent, a palace.

1. In architecture, a large room at the entrance of a house or palace. In the houses of ministers of state, magistrates, &c.,it is the place where they give audience and dispatch business. 2. An edifice in which courts of justice are held as Westminster Hall, which was originally a royal palace,the kings of England formerly holding their parliaments and courts of judicature in their own dwellings, as is still the practice in Spain. 3. A manor-house, in which courts were formerly held. 4. A college, or large edifice belonging to a collegiate institution. 5. A room for a corporation or public assembly as a town-hall Fanueil Hall in Boston, &c. 6. A collegiate body in the universities of Oxford and Cambridge.

Smith's Bible Dictionary [7]

Hall. Used of the court of the high priest's house. Luke 22:55. In Matthew 27:27 and Mark 15:16, "hall" is synonymous with "praetorium", which in John 18:28 is, in the Authorized Version, "judgment hall".

Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words [8]

1: Αὐλή
(Strong'S #833 — Noun Feminine — aule — ow-lay' )

"a court," most frequently the place where a governor dispensed justice, is rendered "hall" in Mark 15:16; Luke 22:55 , AV (RV, "court"). See Court , Fold , Palace.

2: Πραιτώριον
(Strong'S #4232 — Noun Neuter — praitorion — prahee-to'-ree-on )

is translated "common hall" in Matthew 27:27 , AV (RV, "palace"); "Praetorium" in Mark 15:16; "hall of judgment" or "judgment hall" in John 18:28,33; 19:9; Acts 23:35 (RV, "palace," in each place); "praetorian guard," Philippians 1:13 (AV, "palace"). See Palace.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [9]

hôl ( Luke 22:55 the King James Version). See House .

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [10]

occurs in the A.V. of the N.T. three times; twice (Matthew 27:27; Mark 15:16) in reference to the πραίτωριον , praetorium, or residence of the Roman governor at Jerusalem, which was either the palace built by the elder Herod, or the tower of Antonia; his usual abode was at Csesarea (Acts 23:23). Mark adds to the word αὐλή, as he is wont in other cases, an explanatory phrase, ὅ ἐστι πραιτώριον (Vulg. atrium praetorii). In Luke 22:55, αύλή) means the open court or quadrangle belonging to the high priest's house, such as was common to Oriental dwellings. It has the same meaning in Matthew 26:69, and Mark 14:66, and in both passages is incorrectly rendered "palace" in the A.V., as the adverbs ἔξω and κάτω plainly distinguish the αύλή from the οῖκος to which it was attached (Luke 22:54). So in Luke 11:21. In John 10:1; John 10:16, it means a "sheep-fold," and in Revelation 11:2, the outer "court" of the Temple. The αὐλή was entered from the street by a προαύλιον or vestibule (Mark 14:68), through a πυλών or portal (Matthew 26:71), in which was a θύρα or wicket (John 18:16; Acts 12:13). — Kitto. s.v. Αὐλή is the equivalent for חָצֵר, an enclosed or fortified space (Gesenius, Tesaur. p. 512), in many places in the O.T. where the Vulg. and A. Vers. have respectively villa or viculus, "village," or atritum," court," chiefly of the tabernacle or Temple. See Coar. The hall or court of a house or palace would probably be an enclosed but uncovered space, implucium, on a lower level than the apartments of the lowest floor which looked into it. (See House).

The Nuttall Encyclopedia [11]

nglish lawyer and historian, born in London; studied law at Gray's Inn; in 1540 he became one of the judges of the Sheriff's Court; his fame rests on his history "The Union of the Two Noble Families of Lancaster and Yorke," a work which sheds a flood of light on contemporary events, and is, moreover, a noble specimen of English prose (1499-1547).

References