Lachish in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
la'-kish (lakhish; Septuagint Lachis (Josh 15:39), Maches):
1. Location:
A town in the foothills of the Shephelah on the border of
the Philistine plain, belonging to Judah, and, from the
mention of Eglon in connection with it, evidently in the
southwestern portion of Judah's territory. Eusebius,
Onomasticon locates it 7 miles from Eleutheropolis (Beit
Jibrin) toward Daroma, but as the latter place is uncertain,
the indication does not help in fixing the site of Lachish.
The city seems to have been abandoned about 400 BC, and this
circumstance has rendered the identification of the site
difficult. It was formerly fixed at Umm Lakis, from the
similarity of the name and because it was in the region that
the Biblical references to Lachish seem to indicate, but the
mound called Tell el-Hesy is now generally accepted as the
site. This was first suggested by Conder in 1877 (PEFS,
1878, 20), and the excavations carried on at the Tell by the
Israel Exploration Fund in 1890-93 confirmed his
identification. Tell el-Hesy is situated on a wady, or
valley, of the same name (Wady el Hesy), which runs from a
point about 6 miles West of Hebron to the sea between Gaza
and Askelon. It is a mound on the very edge of the wady,
rising some 120 ft. above it and composed of debris to the
depth of about 60 ft., in which the excavations revealed the
remains of distinct cities which had been built, one upon
the ruins of another. The earliest of these was evidently
Amorite, and could not have been later than 1700 BC, and was
perhaps two or three centuries earlier (Bliss, Mound of Many
Cities). The identification rests upon the fact that the
site corresponds with the Biblical and other historical
notices of Lachish, and especially upon the discovery of a
cuneiform tablet in the ruins of the same character as the
Tell el-Amarna Letters, and containing the name of Zimridi,
who is known from these tablets to have been at one time
Egyptian governor of Lachish. The tablets, which date from
the latter part of the 15th or early part of the 14th
century BC, give us the earliest information in regard to
Lachish, and it was then an Egyptian dependency, but it
seems to have revolted and joined with other towns in an
attack upon Jerusalem, which was also an Egyptian
dependency. It was perhaps compelled to do so by the Khabiri
who were then raiding this region. The place was, like Gaza,
an important one for Egypt, being on the frontier and on the
route to Jerusalem, and the importance is seen in the fact
that it was taken and destroyed and rebuilt so many times.
2. History:
We first hear of it in the history...
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