Ashkelon in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Askelon, Ascalon. One of the five Philistine lords' cities
(Joshua 13:3; 1 Samuel 6:17). Remote in the S. on the coast
of the Mediterranean, so less brought into contact with the
Jews; omitted in the towns allotted to Judah (Joshua 15; but
compare Judges 1:18). Gaza was still more S., but on the
main road from Egypt to Israel. Samson slew thirty of the
Ashkelonites, took their spoil, and gave change of raiment
unto them of Timhath who expounded his riddle (Judges
14:19). Later, the temple and lake of Derceto (with a female
head and bust and fish's fail, like Dagon), the Syrian
Venus, stood near it. Here Julian cruelly persecuted the
Christians. Its name still appears in our "eschalot" or"
shallot," an onion for which it was famous, as for its figs,
olives, etc. Within the walls, of which the ruins still
stand, Richard I held his court in the crusades.
After the brilliant battle here the crusaders would
have taken the city, but for Count Raymond's jealousy; and
for long Ashkelon was a thorn to the Christian kingdom. The
Mahometans call it "the bride of Syria." In the Sam. version
of Genesis 20:1-2; Genesis 26:1, Ashkelon stands instead of
Gerar; and curiously tradition in Origen's time pointed out
wells there as those dug by Isaac. The city stands on the
very shore of the Mediterranean, its walls were along the
ridge of rock sweeping round inland in continuation of the
shore cliffs. Conder (Pal. Expl., July, 1875) thinks that
the Ashkelon of the Bible, of Herod, and of the crusaders,
is one and the same town on the seashore, distinguished from
another early Christian inland Ashkelon by the title Ascalon
Maiumas. Maiumas, "watering place," applies not to a port
only, but to any place abounding in water. But Ashkelon and
its port town of Maiumas were distinct, as a bishop of each
signed the acts of the Council of Constantinople, A.D. 536.
The present Ashkelon is the Maiumas of Ascalon; the original
Ashkelon was probably inland, and is now buried in sand.
(Pusey.)
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