Reference: Timnah
Easton
a portion. (1.) A town of Judah (Jos 15:10). The Philistines took possession of it in the days of Ahaz (2Ch 28:18). It was about 20 miles west of Jerusalem. It has been identified with Timnatha of Dan (Jos 19:43), and also with Timnath (Jg 14:1,5).
(2.) A city in the mountains of Judah (Jos 15:57)= Tibna near Jeba'.
(3.) A "duke" or sheik of Edom (Ge 36:40).
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Fausets
("a divided or assigned part".)
1. Judah went to shear his sheep in Timnah (Ge 38:13-14).
2. A boundary town in Judah on the N. side (Jos 15:10). Near the western extremity, further than Bethshemesh, toward Ekron; in the shephelah or low hills between the mountains and the plain (2Ch 28:18). Probably the same as TIMNATHAH of Dan (Jos 19:43), and as the Timhah of Samson. (Jg 14:1,19); haunted by lions, etc., therefore thinly peopled; higher than Askelon, lower than Zorah (Jg 13:25). Now Tibneh, a deserted site S.W. of Zorah, and two miles W. of Ain Shems. Timnah when deserted by the Danite emigrants to Laish fell by turns to Judah and the Philistines.
Tibneh is 740 ft. above the sea, not in the plain. Samson in going down to it would descend first 700 ft. into the valley, then ascend again 350 ft. to Timnah. The grain which he fired grew in the valley, whereas the vineyards and olives lined the hills. With appropriate accuracy Judges (Jg 15:4-6) says "the Philistines came up" to Timnah. The substitution of b for m, which we see in Tibneh for Timnah, occurs also in Atab for Etam (Jg 15:8,11, where instead of KJV "top" translated "he went down and dwelt in the cleft" seiph of the rock Etam). These clefts were the natural hiding places of the Israelites from their oppressors; and the term seiph is only used of the kind of rock to which the term celah is applied, nikrah of the "cavities" of the rock called tsur.
Etam answers to Belt Arab, which has a cavern called "the place of refuge," 250 ft. long, and from 5 to 8 ft. high, 18 ft. wide. The natural cleft has been artificially but rudely hewn in the rock. As Beit Atab, into which Samson went down for refuge (now called Hasuta), answers to the rock Elam ("eagle's nest"), so seven miles off is a low hill, and close by is a chapel sacred to sheikh Nedhir, "the Nazarite chief," and higher up is the ruin "Ism-Allah," i.e. God heard, evidently pointing to the battle of Ramath Lehi. Moreover the springs were sometimes called Ayun Kara, answering to En-Hak. Kore, "fountain of the crier": Jg 15:19. (Palestine Exploration Quarterly Statement, July 1878, pp. 116-118).
3. A town in the mountain district of Judah, enumerated with Maon, Ziph, and Carmel S. of Hebron.
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Hastings
1. A town in the high region of S. Judah, S. E. of Hebron (Jos 15:57). It is possible that this was the Timnah visited by Judah at the time of sheep-shearing (Ge 38:12). Or it may have been
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Morish
Tim'nah
1. Duke descended from Esau. Ge 36:40; 1Ch 1:51. Perhaps the same as TIMNA No. 3.
2. City on the north border of Judah. Jos 15:10. Identified with ruins at Tibnah, 31 45' N, 34 56' E.
3. City in the south of Judah. Jos 15:57; 2Ch 28:18. Identified with Tibna, 31 42' N, 35 2' E.
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Smith
Tim'nah
(portion).
1. A place which formed one of the landmarks on the north boundary of the allotment of Judah.
It is probably identical with the Thimnathah of
and that again with the Timnath, or, more accurately, Timnathah, of Samson
and the Thamnatha of the Maccabees. The modern representative of all these various forms of the same name is probably Tibneh, a village about two miles west of Ain Shems (Beth-shemesh). In the later history of the Jews, Timnah must have been a conspicuous place. It was fortified by Bacchides as one of the most important military posts of Judea. 1 Macc. 9:50.
2. A town in the mountain district of Judah.
A distinct place from that just examined.
3. Inaccurately written Timnath in the Authorized Version, the scene of the adventure of Judah with his daughter in-law Tamar.
There is nothing here to indicate its position. It may be identified either with the Timnah in the mountains of Judah No. 23 or with the Timnathath of Samson [No. 1].