Anathoth
Fausset's Bible Dictionary [1]
1. 1 Chronicles 7:8.
2. 1 Chronicles 10:19.
3. A priests' city of Benjamin. ("echoes".) ( Joshua 21:18; 1 Chronicles 6:60). Abiathar the priest was banished thither by Solomon after his attempt to put Adonijah on the throne ( 1 Kings 2:26). Abiezer's birthplace, one of David's 30 captains ( 2 Samuel 23:27); Jehu's also, one of his mighties ( 1 Chronicles 12:3); Jeremiah's, the priest and prophet, also ( Jeremiah 1:1). Among the restored captives from Babylon were 128 men of Anathoth The name is variously given: Anethothite, Anetothite, Antothite. Near the road, about three miles N. from Jerusalem ( Isaiah 10:30). Now Anata, on a broad ridge, amidst fields of grain, figs, and olives. There are remains of walls, and quarries supplying stone to Jerusalem.
Morrish Bible Dictionary [2]
1. Beniamite, son ofBecher. 1 Chronicles 7:8 .
2. One of the chiefs of the people who sealed the covenant. Nehemiah 10:19 .
3. City assigned to the priests in the territory of Benjamin, where Abiathar the high priest had his own 'fields,' and where Jeremiah was born: its inhabitants persecuted the prophet. Identified with Anata , 35 15' E 31 49' N . Joshua 21:18; 1 Kings 2:26; 1 Chronicles 6:60; Ezra 2:23; Nehemiah 7:27; Nehemiah 11:32 , Isaiah 10:30; Jeremiah 1:1; Jeremiah 11:21,23; Jeremiah 29:27; Jeremiah 32:7-9 .
Smith's Bible Dictionary [3]
Anathoth. (Answers To Prayer).
1. Son of Becher, a son of Benjamin. 1 Chronicles 7:8.
2. One of the "heads of the people" who signed the covenant in the time of Nehemiah. Nehemiah 10:19. (B.C. 410).
3. A priests' city belonging to the tribe of Benjamin, with "suburbs." Joshua 21:18; 1 Chronicles 6:60. Anathoth lay about three miles from Jerusalem. Isaiah 10:30.
The cultivation of the priests survives in tilled fields of grain, with figs and olives. There are the remains of walls and strong foundations, and the quarries still supply Jerusalem with building stones.
People's Dictionary of the Bible [4]
Anathoth ( Ăn'A-Th Ŏth ), Answers or Echoes. A Levitical city in Benjamin, Joshua 21:18; 1 Chronicles 6:60; the birthplace of Jeremiah, Jeremiah 1:1; Jeremiah 11:21; Jeremiah 11:23; Jeremiah 32:7-9; on the route of the Assyrians, Isaiah 10:30; some of its people returned with Zerubbabel, Ezra 2:23; Nehemiah 7:27.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [5]
ANATHOTH . 1 . A town in Benjamin given to the Levites ( Joshua 21:18 ); the modern ‘Anâta , 2 1 / 4 miles N. of Jerusalem, an insignificant village with considerable ruins. It was the home of Abiathar ( 1 Kings 2:26 ) and of Jeremiah ( Jeremiah 1:1 ); re-occupied after the exile ( Nehemiah 7:27; Nehemiah 10:19 ). 2 . A Benjamite, son of Becher ( 1 Chronicles 7:8 ).
W. Ewing.
Holman Bible Dictionary [6]
Joshua 21:18 1 Kings 2:26-27 Jeremiah 1:1 Jeremiah 11:21-23 Jeremiah 32:6-15 Nehemiah 7:27 Nehemiah 11:32 2 1 Chronicles 7:8 3 Nehemiah 10:19
American Tract Society Bible Dictionary [7]
One of the cities given to the priests, in Benjamin; identified by Robinson in Anata, some four miles north by east of Jerusalem, Joshua 21:18; 1 Chronicles 6:60 . It was the birthplace of the prophet Jeremiah, Jeremiah 1:1; 32:7 . It's people, however, rejected his words, and sought his life, Jeremiah 11:21 .
Easton's Bible Dictionary [8]
Joshua 21:18 2 Samuel 23:27 1 Chronicles 12:3 Jeremiah 1:1 11:21-23 29:27 32:7-9 Nehemiah 7:27 Ezra 2:23
Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary [9]
A beautiful village, in the tribe of Benjamin, about three miles from Jerusalem, remarkable for being the birthplace of the prophet Jeremiah. The name, if taken, as may be supposed, from Anath, signifies song.
Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [10]
(Heb., A nathoth', עֲנָתוֹת , Answers, i.e. to prayers; Sept. Ἀναθώθ ) , the name of one city and of two men.
1. One of the towns belonging to the priests in the tribe of Benjamin, and as such a city of refuge ( Joshua 21:18). it is omitted from the list in Joshua 18:1-28, but included "suburbs" ( 1 Chronicles 6:60 [45]). Hither, to his "fields," Abiathar was banished by Solomon after the failure of his attempt to put Adonijah on the throne ( 1 Kings 2:26). This was the native place of Abiezer, one of David's 30 captains ( 2 Samuel 23:27; 1 Chronicles 11:28; 1 Chronicles 27:12), and of Jehu, another of the mighty men ( 1 Chronicles 12:3). The "men" ( אֲנָשִׁים , not בָּנִים , as in most of the other cases; compare, however, Netophah, Michmash, etc.) of Anathoth returned from the captivity with Zerubbabel ( Ezra 2:23; Nehemiah 7:27; 1 Esdras 5:18). It is chiefly memorable, however, as the birthplace and usual residence of the prophet Jeremiah ( Jeremiah 1:1; Jeremiah 11:21-23; Jeremiah 29:27; Jeremiah 32:7-9), whose name it seems to have borne in the time of Jerome, "Anathth of Jeremiah" (Onomast. s.v.). The same writer (Comment. in Jeremiah 1:1-19; Jeremiah 1:1-19) places Anathoth three Roman miles north of Jerusalem, which correspond with the twenty stadia assigned by Josephus (Ant. 10, 7, 3). In the Talmud (Yoma, 10) it is called Anath ( עֲנָת ). (For other notices, see Reland's Paloest. p. 561 sq.) Anathoth lay on or near the great road from the north to Jerusalem ( Isaiah 10:30). The traditional site at Kuriet El-Enab does not fulfill these conditions, being 10 miles distant from the city, and nearer west than north. Dr. Robinson ( Researches, 2, 109) appears to have discovered this place in the present village of Anata, at the distance of an hour and a quarter from Jerusalem (Tobler, Topogr. 5, Jerus. 2, 394). It is seated on a broad ridge of hills, and commands an extensive view of the eastern slope of the mountainous tract of Benjamin, including also the valley of the Jordan, and the northern part of the Dead Sea (see Hackett's Illustr. of Script. p. 191). It seems to have been once a walled town and a place of strength. Portions of the wall still remain, built of large hewn stones, and apparently ancient, as are also the foundations of some of the houses. It is now a small and very poor village; yet the cultivation of the priests survives in tilled fields of grain, with figs and olives. From the vicinity a favorite kind of building-stone is carried to Jerusalem. Troops of donkeys are employed in this service, a hewn stone being slung on each side; the larger stones are transported on camels (Raumer's Paldistina, p. 169; Thomson's Land and Book, 2, 548).
Its inhabitants were sometimes called ANATHOTHITES (See Anathothites) ( Annethothi', עִנְּתֹתִי , "Anethothite," 2 Samuel 23:27; or Anthothi', עִנְתֹתִי , "Antothite," 1 Chronicles 11:28;
"Anetothite," 27:12). (See Antothite).
2. The eighth named of the nine sons of Becher, the son of Benjamin ( 1 Chronicles 7:8). B.C. post 1856.
3. One of the chief Israelites that sealed the covenant on the return from Babylon ( Nehemiah 10:19), B.C. cir. 410.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [11]
an´a - thoth ( ענתות , ‛ănāthōth ; Ἀναθώθ , Anathō̇th ): A town which lay between Michmash and Jerusalem ( Isaiah 10:30 ), in the territory of Benjamin, assigned to the Levites ( Joshua 21:18 ). It was the native place of Abiathar ( 1 Kings 2:26 ), and of the prophet Jer ( Jeremiah 1:1; Jeremiah 11:21 , etc.). Here lay the field which, under remarkable circumstances, the prophet purchased ( Jeremiah 32:7 ). Two of David's distinguished soldiers, Abiezer ( 2 Samuel 23:27 ) and Jehu ( 1 Chronicles 12:3 ), also hailed from Anathoth. It was again occupied by the Benjamites after the return from the Exile ( Nehemiah 11:32 , etc.). It is identified with , ‛Anātā , two and a quarter miles Northeast of Jerusalem, a small village of some fifteen houses with remains of ancient walls. There are quarries in the neighborhood from which stones are still carried to Jerusalem. It commands a spacious outlook over the uplands to the North, and especially to the Southeast, over the Jordan valley toward the Dead Sea and the mountains of Moab. There is nothing to shelter it from the withering power of the winds from the eastern deserts ( Jeremiah 4:11; Jeremiah 18:17 , etc.).
Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature [12]
An´athoth, one of the towns belonging to the priests in the tribe of Benjamin, and as such a city of refuge ( Joshua 21:18; Jeremiah 1:1). It occurs also in 2 Samuel 23:27; Ezra 2:23; Nehemiah 7:27; but is chiefly memorable as the birthplace and usual residence of the prophet Jeremiah ( Jeremiah 1:1; Jeremiah 11:21-23; Jeremiah 29:27). Dr. Robinson appears to have discovered this place in the present village of Anata, at the distance of an hour and a quarter from Jerusalem. It is seated on a broad ridge of hills, and commands an extensive view of the eastern slope of the mountainous tract of Benjamin; including also the valley of the Jordan, and the northern part of the Dead Sea. It seems to have been once a walled town and a place of strength. Portions of the wall still remain, built of large hewn stones, and apparently ancient, as are also the foundations of some of the houses. It is now a small and very poor village. From the vicinity a favorite kind of building-stone is carried to Jerusalem.
References
- ↑ Anathoth from Fausset's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anathoth from Morrish Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anathoth from Smith's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anathoth from People's Dictionary of the Bible
- ↑ Anathoth from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
- ↑ Anathoth from Holman Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anathoth from American Tract Society Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anathoth from Easton's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anathoth from Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary
- ↑ Anathoth from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
- ↑ Anathoth from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
- ↑ Anathoth from Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature