Bethphage in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
beth'-fa-je, beth'-faj (from beth paghah; Bethphage, or
Bethphage; in Aramaic "place of young figs"): Near the Mount
of Olives and to the road from Jerusalem to Jericho; mentioned
together with Bethany (Mt 21:1; Mk 11:1; Lk 19:29). The place
occurs in several Talmudic passages where it may be inferred
that it was near but outside Jerusalem; it was at the
Sabbatical distance limit East of Jerusalem, and was
surrounded by some kind of wall. The medieval Bethphage was
between the summit and Bethany. The site is now enclosed by
the Roman Catholics. As regards the Bethphage of the New
Testament, the most probable suggestion was that it occupied
the summit itself where Kefr et Tur stands today. This village
certainly occupies an ancient site and no other name is known.
This is much more probable than the suggestion that the modern
Abu Dis is on the site of Bethphage.
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