House in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
            hous (bayith; oikos, in classical Greek generally "an 
estate," oikia, oikema (literally, "habitation"), in Acts 
12:1, "prison"):
I. CAVE DWELLINGS
II. STONE-BUILT AND MUD/BRICK-BUILT HOUSES
1. Details of Plan and Construction
(1) Corner-Stone
(2) Floor
(3) Gutter
(4) Door
(5) Hinge
(6) Lock and Key
(7) Threshold
(8) Hearth
(9) Window
(10) Roof
2. Houses of More than One Story
(1) Upper Chambers and Stairs
(2) Palaces and Castles
3. Internal Appearance
III. OTHER MEANINGS
LITERATURE
I. Cave Dwellings.
The earliest permanent habitations of the prehistoric 
inhabitants of Israel were the natural caves which abound 
throughout the country. As the people increased and grouped 
themselves into communities, these abodes were supplemented 
by systems of artificial caves which, in some cases, 
developed into extensive burrowings of many adjoining 
compartments, having in each system several entrances. These 
entrances were usually cut through the roof down a few 
steps, or simply dropped to the floor from the rock surface. 
The sinking was shallow and the headroom low but sufficient 
for the undersized troglodites who were the occupiers.
II. Stone-built and Mud/Brick-built Houses.
There are many references to the use of caves as dwellings 
in the Old Testament. Lot dwelt with his two daughters in 
cave (Gen 19:30). Elijah, fleeing from Jezebel, lodged in a 
cave (1 Ki 19:9). The natural successor to the cave was the 
stone-built hut, and just as the loose field-bowlders and 
the stones, quarried from the caves, served their first and 
most vital uses in the building of defense walls, so did 
they later become material for the first hut. Caves, during 
the rainy season, were faulty dwellings, as at the time when 
protection was most needed, they were being flooded through 
the surface openings which formed their entrances. The 
rudest cell built of rough stones in mud and covered a with 
roof of brushwood and mud was at first sufficient. More 
elaborate plans of several apartments, entering from what 
may be called a living-room, followed as a matter of course, 
and these, huddled together, constituted the homes of the 
people. Mud-brick buildings (Job 4:19) of similar plan 
occur, and to protect this friable material from the 
weather, the walls were sometimes covered with a casing of 
stone slabs, as at Lachish. (See Bliss, A Mound of Many 
Cities.) Generally speaking, this rude type of building 
prevailed, although, in some of the larger buildings, square 
dressed and jointed stones were used. There is little or no 
sign of improvement until the period of the Hellenistic 
influence, and even then the improvement was slight, so far 
as the homes of the common people were concerned.
1. Details of Plan and Construction:
One should observe an isometric sketch and plan showing 
construction of a typical small house...
                          
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