Aphek (biblical)

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Template:Short description The name Aphek or Aphec[1] refers to one of several locations mentioned in the Hebrew Bible as the scenes of a number of battles between the Israelites and the Arameans and Philistines:

  • Most famously, a town near which one or more rulers of Damascus named Ben-hadad were defeated by the Israelites and in which the Damascene king and his surviving soldiers found a safe place of retreat (Script error: No such module "Bibleverse".; Script error: No such module "Bibleverse".). Just before his death, the prophet Elisha predicted:
"The arrow of the Lord's deliverance and the arrow of deliverance from Syria; for you must strike the Syrians at Aphek till you have destroyed them (Script error: No such module "Bibleverse".).

Location

Golan or eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee

After the turn of the 20th century the predominant opinion was that the location of all these battles is one and the same, and that the town lay east of the Jordan.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Initially it was thought that the name is preserved in the now depopulated village of Fiq near Kibbutz Afik, three miles east of the Sea of Galilee, where an ancient mound, Tell Soreg, had been identified. Excavations by Moshe Kochavi and Pirhiya Beck in 1987–1988 have indeed discovered a fortified ninth- and eighth-century BCE settlement, probably Aramean, but Kochavi considered it to be too small to serve the role ascribed to Aphek in the Bible.[2][3] The site most favoured now by the archaeologists is Tel 'En Gev/Khirbet el-'Asheq, a mound located within Kibbutz Ein Gev.[4][5]

A more recent theory has focused on regarding this same Aphek also as the scene of the two battles against the Philistines Script error: No such module "Unsubst". mentioned by the Bible - the supposition Script error: No such module "Unsubst". being that the SyriansScript error: No such module "Unsubst". were invading Israel from the western side, which was their most vulnerable.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Judaean hills

Since most scholars agree that there were more than one Aphek, C.R. Conder identified the Aphek of Eben-Ezer [6] with a ruin (khirbet) some Template:Convert distant from Dayr Aban (believed to be Eben-Ezer), and known by the name Marj al-Fikiya; the name al-Fikiya being an Arabic corruption of Aphek.[7] Eusebius, when writing about Eben-ezer in his Onomasticon, says that it is "the place from which the Gentiles seized the Ark, between Jerusalem and Ascalon, near the village of Bethsamys (Beit Shemesh),"[8] a locale that corresponds with Conder's identification.

References

Template:Reflist

Template:JewishEncyclopedia Template:Authority control Template:Coord

  1. Script error: No such module "Bibleverse".: Douai Rheims translation
  2. "The Golan Heights: A Battlefield of the Ages", Los Angeles Times, 11 September 1988
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. Hasegawa (2012), pp. 71-72.
  6. The account in Script error: No such module "Bibleverse". of the battle at Aphek and Eben-ezer
  7. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  8. Eusebius Werke, Erich Klostermann (ed.), Leipig 1904, p. 33,24.