Jotham in Easton's Bible Dictionary
Jehovah is perfect. (1.) The youngest of Gideon's seventy
sons.
He escaped when the rest were put to death by the
order of
Abimelech (Judg. 9:5). When "the citizens of Shechem
and the
whole house of Millo" were gathered together "by the
plain of
the pillar" (i.e., the stone set up by Joshua,
24:26; comp. Gen.
35:4) "that was in Shechem, to make Abimelech king,"
from one of
the heights of Mount Gerizim he protested against
their doing so
in the earliest parable, that of the bramble-king.
His words
then spoken were prophetic. There came a recoil in
the feelings
of the people toward Abimelech, and then a terrible
revenge, in
which many were slain and the city of Shechem was
destroyed by
Abimelech (Judg. 9:45). Having delivered his
warning, Jotham
fled to Beer from the vengeance of Abimelech (9:7-
21).
(2.) The son and successor of Uzziah on the throne
of Judah.
As during his last years Uzziah was excluded from
public life on
account of his leprosy, his son, then twenty-five
years of age,
administered for seven years the affairs of the
kingdom in his
father's stead (2 Chr. 26:21, 23; 27:1). After his
father's
death he became sole monarch, and reigned for
sixteen years
(B.C. 759-743). He ruled in the fear of God, and his
reign was
prosperous. He was contemporary with the prophets
Isaiah, Hosea,
and Micah, by whose ministrations he profited. He
was buried in
the sepulchre of the kings, greatly lamented by the
people (2
Kings 15:38; 2 Chr. 27:7-9).
Read More about Jotham in Easton's Bible Dictionary