Debir in Easton's Bible Dictionary
oracle town; sanctuary. (1.) One of the eleven cities to the
west of Hebron, in the highlands of Judah (Josh.
15:49; Judg.
1:11-15). It was originally one of the towns of the
Anakim
(Josh. 15:15), and was also called Kirjath-sepher
(q.v.) and
Kirjath-sannah (49). Caleb, who had conquered and
taken
possession of the town and district of Hebron (Josh.
14:6-15),
offered the hand of his daughter to any one who
would
successfully lead a party against Debir. Othniel,
his younger
brother (Judg. 1:13; 3:9), achieved the conquest,
and gained
Achsah as his wife. She was not satisfied with the
portion her
father gave her, and as she was proceeding toward
her new home,
she "lighted from off her ass" and said to him,
"Give me a
blessing [i.e., a dowry]: for thou hast given me a
south land"
(Josh. 15:19, A.V.); or, as in the Revised Version,
"Thou hast
set me in the land of the south", i.e., in the
Negeb, outside
the rich valley of Hebron, in the dry and barren
land. "Give me
also springs of water. And he gave her the upper
springs, and
the nether springs."
Debir has been identified with the modern Edh-
Dhaheriyeh,
i.e., "the well on the ridge", to the south of
Hebron.
(2.) A place near the "valley of Achor" (Josh.
15:7), on the
north boundary of Judah, between Jerusalem and
Jericho.
(3.) The king of Eglon, one of the five Canaanitish
kings who
were hanged by Joshua (Josh. 10:3, 23) after the
victory at
Gibeon. These kings fled and took refuge in a cave
at Makkedah.
Here they were kept confined till Joshua returned
from the
pursuit of their discomfited armies, when he caused
them to be
brought forth, and "Joshua smote them, and slew
them, and hanged
them on five trees" (26).
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