Chariots in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Chariot, sometimes including the horses (2 Samuel 8:4; 2
Samuel 10:18). Mentioned first in Genesis 41:43, where
Joseph rides in Pharaoh's second chariot; also Genesis
46:29. In the Egyptian monuments they occur to the number of
27,000 in records of the reign of Rameses II, 1300 B.C., and
even earlier in the 18th dynasty 1530 B.C., when Amosis I
used them against the shepherd kings. A leading purpose of
chariots was war. Pharaoh followed Israel with 600 chosen
chariots (Exodus 14:7). The Canaanites of the valleys armed
theirs apparently with iron scythes (Joshua 17:18; Judges
1:19). Jabin had 900, which enabled him to "oppress the
children of Israel mightily," because of their sins (Judges
4:3). The Philistines in Saul's time had 30,000 (1 Samuel
13:5). David took from Hadarezer of Zobah 1,000, and from
the Syrians 700; these to retrieve their loss gathered
32,000 (1 Chronicles 19:7).
God forbad their use to His people, lest they should
depend on human help rather than on Him (Deuteronomy 17:16;
Deuteronomy 20:1; Psalm 20:7), also lest there should be a
turning of the elect nation's heart back to Egypt and its
corrupt ways. Solomon from carnal state policy allied
himself to Egypt, and disregarded God's prohibition, as
Samuel foretold would be the case if Israel, not content
with God, should set up a human king (1 Samuel 8:11-12).
Solomon had 1,400 chariots, and bought each out of Egypt at
600 shekels of silver, and a horse for 150; and taxed
certain cities for the cost, according to eastern usage (1
Kings 9:19; 1 Kings 10:26; 1 Kings 10:29). In Exodus 14:7
translate "captains (literally, men of the king's council of
30) over the whole of them." Not as some thought, "third men
in every one of them."
For the Egyptian chariots only carried two, the
driver and the warrior. The Assyrian chariots (Nahum 2:3-4)
depicted on the monuments often contain a third, namely, the
warrior's shieldbearer. In Exodus 14:9 "horsemen" are
mentioned. Hengstenberg thinks rekeb does not mean cavalry,
as they are not depicted in the Egyptian monuments, but
merely "riders in chariots." But Diodorus Siculus states
that Rameses II had 24,000 cavalry. Egyptian art seems even
in later times, when certainly cavalry were employed, to
have avoided depicting horsemen. The language of Exodus
15:1; Isaiah 31:1, can be reconciled with either view.
Ancient papyri allude to mounting on horseback (Cook, in
Speaker's Commentary). The men in the chariot always stood.
The Egyptian chariot consisted of a semicircular
frame of wood with straight sides, resting on the axle-tree
of a pair of wheels; and on the frame a rail attached by
leather thongs; one wooden upright in front; open at the
back for mounting. On the right side the bowcase and the
quiver and spearcase crossed diagonally. The horses wore
only breastband and girths attached to the saddle, and a
bearing rein fastened to a ring in front of it. In New
Testament the only chariots mentioned are that of the
Ethiopian eunuch of Candace (Acts 8:28-29; Acts 8:38), and
Revelation 9:9. The Persians sacrificed horses to the sun;
so the Jews under the idolatrous Manasseh dedicated chariots
and horses to the sun (2 Kings 23:11). Josiah burned these
chariots with fire, thus making the object of their
superstition, fire, to consume their instruments of worship.
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