Armory

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

Webster's Dictionary [1]

(1): (n.) Ensigns armorial; armorial bearings.

(2): (n.) That branch of heraldry which treats of coat armor.

(3): (n.) A place where arms and instruments of war are deposited for safe keeping.

(4): (n.) A manufactory of arms, as rifles, muskets, pistols, bayonets, swords.

(5): (n.) Armor; defensive and offensive arms.

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [2]

( תִּלְפִּיּוֹה , Talpiyoth', Destructives, i.e. Weapons,  Song of Solomon 4:4), the place in which armor was deposited in times of peace. Solomon had a naval arsenal at Ezion-geber (Jeremiah 1:25;  1 Kings 9:26). There is mention made in  Nehemiah 3:19, of an armory ( נֵשֶׁק , Ne'Shek, elsewhere Armor) in Jerusalem, "at the turning of the wall," meaning probably the bend in the brow of Zion opposite the south-western corner of the Temple, near where the bridge connected them, although Josephus (Ant. 9: 7, 2) speaks of the armory as being in the temple itself. This was probably the arsenal ("house of armor") which Hezekiah took so much pride in showing to the Babylonian ambassadors ( Isaiah 39:2). Dr. Barclay (City Of The Great King, p. 155) thinks it was the same as "the house of the forest of Lebanon" ( 2 Kings 10:17;  Isaiah 22:8), and locates it at the north- eastern corner of Zion, adjoining the north-western angle of the Xystus. (See Arsenal).

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [3]

ar´mẽr - i  : (1) (אוצר , 'ōcar  ; θησαυρός , thēsaurós ): A storehouse ( 1 Kings 7:51;  Nehemiah 10:38 ), but employed figuratively of the stored-up anger of Yahweh which breaks forth in judgments ( Jeremiah 50:25 ). (2) (נשׁק , nēsheḳ ): Identical with Solomon's "house of the forest of Lebanon," the arsenal close to the temple ( 1 Kings 10:17;  Nehemiah 3:19;  Isaiah 22:8 ), in which were stored the shields and targets of beaten gold. (3) (תּלפיּות , talpı̄yōth ): A puzzling word rendered "armory" in our versions ( Song of Solomon 4:4 ) - "the tower of David builded for an armory, whereon there hang a thousand bucklers, all shields of mighty men." the Revised Version margin renders "builded with turrets."

.

References