Millo in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
mil'-o. (millo generally interpreted to mean a "filling,"
e.g. a solid tower or an earth embankment; in Jdg 9:6,20; 2
Ki 12:20, we get beth millo', translated in English Versions
of the Bible "House of Millo," which Winckler thinks may
have been the original Jebusite temple-shrine of Jerusalem
(see BETH-MILLO); Septuagint reads Bethmaalon, also Maalon
and oikos Maallon):
1. Old Testament References
It is generally supposed that "The Millo" was some kind of
fortress or other defense, but many speculations have been
made regarding its position. In 2 Sam 5:9, we read that
David built round about from the Millo and inward, or (in
the Septuagint, Septuagint) "he fortified it, the city,
round about from the Millo and his house" (compare 1 Ch
11:8). In connection with Solomon's strengthening of the
fortifications, there are several references to Millo. In 1
Ki 9:15, Solomon raised a levy "to build the house of
Yahweh, and his own house, and Millo, and the wall of
Jerusalem," etc.; in 9:24, "Pharaoh's daughter came up out
of the city of David unto her house which Solomon had built
for her: then did he build Millo"; in 1 Ki 11:27, Solomon
"built Millo, and repaired the breach of the city of David
his father." At a later time Hezekiah "took courage, and
built up all the wall that was broken down, and raised it up
to the towers, and the other wall without, and strengthened
Millo in the city of David" (2 Ch 32:5; 2 Ki 12:20); Joash
was slain by his servants "at the house of Millo, on the way
that goeth down to Silla," but possibly this may have been
in Shechem (compare Jdg 9:6).
2. Identical with the Akra Site:
The mention of the site in the days of David and the
reference to it in connection with the city of David (1 Ki
11:27) point to some part of the southeastern hill South of
the temple. It is suggestive that Millo is in Septuagint
always translated by "Akra." It seems to the present writer
very probable that it was a fortress crowning the hill on
which at a later time stood the Syrian Akra, which hill, if
we are to believe Josephus (BJ, V, iv, 1, etc.), was cut
down because its commanding situation dominated the temple.
This hill cannot have been the site of Zion afterward known
as "David's Burg" (City of David), because the tombs of the
Judean kings were within its walls, and that alone would
have made the complete leveling of the site impossible, but
whereas the Jebusite fortress was probably not far from
Gihon, this fortified summit may have been, as Watson
suggests for the Akra, as far north as where the present Al
Aqsa mosque is situated. In David's time it may have been an
isolated and detached fort guarding the north approach, but
if it was originally a Jebusite high place (Winckler) partly
of sun-dried brick like similar constructions in Babylonia,
the account of its being leveled would be much more
credible. The importance of this site in the days of Solomon
is fully explicable if this was the citadel guarding the
newly built temple and royal palaces.
Dr. G.A. Smith is inclined to think that Millo may have been
a fortress "off the south end of Ophel, to retain and
protect the old pool," and Vincent suggests that the site of
Millo is that now occupied by the great causeway connecting
the Western and Eastern hills along which runs the Tariq bab
es silsileh.
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