Pisgah in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
piz'-ga (ha-picgah; Phasga, to lelaxeumenon, he laxeute):
This name, which has always the definite article, appears
only in combination either with ro'sh, "head," "top," or
'ashdoth, not translated in the King James Version save in
Dt 4:49, where it is rendered "springs" the Revised Version
(British and American) uniformly "slopes," the Revised
Version margin "springs."
Pisgah is identified with Nebo in Dt 34:1; compare 3:27.
"The top of Pisgah, which looketh down upon the desert"
marks a stage in the march of the host of Israel (Nu 21:20).
Hither Balak brought Balaam to the field of Zophim (Nu
23:14). Here Moses obtained his view of the Promised Land,
and died. See NEBO. Many scholars (e.g. Buhl, GAP, 122;
Gray, "Numbers," ICC, 291) take Pisgah as the name applying
to the mountain range in which the Moab plateau terminates
to the West, the "top" or "head" of Pisgah being the point
in which the ridge running out westward from the main mass
culminates. The summit commands a wide view, and looks down
upon the desert. The identification is made surer by the
name Tal'at es-Sufa found here, which seems to correspond
with the field of Zophim.
'Ashdoth is the construct plural of 'ashedhah (singular form
not found), from 'eshedh, "foundation," "bottom," "lower
part" (slope); compare Assyrian ishdu, "foundation." Some
would, derive it from Aramaic 'ashadh, "to pour," whence
"fall" or "slope" (OHL, under the word). Ashdoth-pisgah
overlooked the Dead Sea from the East (Dt 3:17; 4:49; Josh
12:3; 13:20). There can be no reasonable doubt that Ashdoth-
pisgah signifies the steep slopes of the mountain descending
into the contiguous valleys.
It is worthy of note that Septuagint does not uniformly
render Pisgah by a proper name, but sometimes by a
derivative of laxeuo, "to hew" or "to dress stone" (Nu
21:20; 23:14; Dt 3:27; 4:49). Jerome (Onomasticon, under the
word Asedoth) gives abscisum as the Latin equivalent of
Fasga. He derives Pisgah from pacagh, which, in new Hebrew,
means "to split," "to cut off." This suggests a mountain the
steep sides of which give it the appearance of having been
"cut out." This description applies perfectly to Jebel Neba
as viewed from the Dead Sea.
Read More about Pisgah in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE