Megiddo in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
me-gid'-o, me-gid'-on (meghiddo, meghiddon; Magiddo,
Mageddon, Magdo): A royal city of the Canaanites, the king
of which was slain by Joshua (Josh 12:21). It lay within the
territory of Issachar, but was one of the cities assigned to
Manasseh (Josh 17:11; 1 Ch 7:29). Manasseh, however, was not
able to expel the Canaanites, who therefore continued to
dwell in that land. Later, when the children of Israel were
waxen strong, the Canaanites were put to taskwork (Josh
17:12 f; Jdg 1:27 f). The host of Sisera was drawn to the
river Kishon, and here, "by the waters of Megiddo," the
famous battle was fought (Jdg 5:19). By the time of Solomon,
Israel's supremacy was unquestioned. Megiddo was included in
one of his administrative districts (1 Ki 4:12), and it was
one of the cities which he fortified (1 Ki 9:15). Ahaziah,
mortally wounded at the ascent of Gur, fled to Megiddo to
die (2 Ki 9:27). At Megiddo, Josiah, king of Judah,
attempted to arrest Pharaoh-necoh and his army on their
march to the Euphrates against the king of Assyria. Here the
Egyptian monarch "slew him .... when he had seen him," and
from Megiddo went the sorrowful procession to Jerusalem with
Josiah's corpse (2 Ki 23:29 f; 2 Ch 35:20 ff). The sad tale
is told again in 1 Esdras 1:25 ff. "The mourning of
Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddon" became a poetical
expression for the deepest and most despairing grief (Zec
12:11).
See also ARMAGEDDON.
The constant association of Megiddo with Taanach (Tell
Ta`anek) points to a position on the south edge of the plain
of Esdraelon. In confirmation of this, we read (RP, 1st
series, II, 35-47) that Thothmes III captured Megiddo, after
having defeated the Palestinian allies who opposed him. He
left his camp at Aruna (possibly `Ar`arah), and, following a
defile (possibly Wady `Arah), he approached Megiddo from the
South We should thus look for the city where the pass opens
on the plain; and here, at Khan el-Lejjan, we find extensive
ruins on both sides of a stream which turns several mills
before falling into the Kishon. We may identify the site
with Megiddo, and the stream with "the waters of Megiddo."
Pharaoh-necoh would naturally take the same line of march,
and his advance could be nowhere more hopefully opposed than
at el-Lejjun. Tell el-Mutasellim, a graceful mound hard by,
on the edge of the plain, may have formed the acropolis of
Megiddo.
The name Mujadda` attaches to a site 3 miles South of Beisan
in the Jordan valley. Here Conder would place Megiddo. But
while there is a resemblance in the name, the site really
suits none of the Biblical data. The phrase "Taanach by the
waters of Megiddo" alone confines us to a very limited area.
No position has yet been suggested which meets all the
conditions as well as el-Lejjun.
The Khan here shows that the road through the pass from
Esdraelon to the plain of Sharon and the coast was still
much frequented in the Middle Ages.
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