Tower Of Siloam
Easton's Bible Dictionary [1]
Luke 13:4
As illustrative of the movement of small bands of Canaanites from place to place, and the intermingling of Canaanites and Israelites even in small towns in earlier times, M.C. Ganneau records the following curious fact: "Among the inhabitants of the village (of Siloam) there are a hundred or so domiciled for the most part in the lower quarter, and forming a group apart from the rest, called Dhiabrye, i.e., men of Dhiban. It appears that at some remote period a colony from the capital of king Mesha (Dibon-Moab) crossed the Jordan and fixed itself at the gates of Jerusalem at Silwan. The memory of this migration is still preserved; and I am assured by the people themselves that many of their number are installed in other villages round Jerusalem" (quoted by Henderson, Palestine).
Fausset's Bible Dictionary [2]
Luke 13:4. Probably connected with "the wall of the pool of Siloah by the king's garden" ( Nehemiah 3:15); "at the wall's bend to the S. above the fountain of Siloam" (Josephus B. J. 5:4, section 2) was probably a tower. Jotham "built much on the wall of Ophel" ( 2 Chronicles 27:3); "Manasseh compassed about Ophel" ( 2 Chronicles 33:14); a "tower lay (Projecting) out" in Ophel ( Nehemiah 3:26); such a projection might easily fall.