Rehoboth in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
re-ho'-both, re-ho'-both (rehobhoth, "broad places";
Euruchoria): One of the wells dug by Isaac (Gen 26:22). It is
probably the Rubuta of the Tell el-Amarna Letters (Petrie,
numbers 256, 260; see also The Expository Times, XI, 239
(Konig), 377 (Sayce)), and it is almost certainly identical
with the ruin Ruchaibeh, 8 hours Southwest of Beersheba.
Robinson (BR, I, 196-97) describes the ruins of the ancient
city as thickly covering a "level tract of 10 to 12 acres in
extent"; "many of the dwellings had each its cistern, cut in
the solid rock"; "once this must have been a city of not less
than 12,000 or 15,000 inhabitants. Now it is a perfect field
of ruins, a scene of unutterable desolation, across which the
passing stranger can with difficulty find his way." Huntington
(Israel and Its Transformation, 124) describes considerable
remains of a suburban population extending both to the North
and to the South of this once important place.
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