Samaria in Easton's Bible Dictionary
a watch-mountain or a watch-tower. In the heart of the
mountains
of Israel, a few miles north-west of Shechem, stands
the "hill
of Shomeron," a solitary mountain, a great
"mamelon." It is an
oblong hill, with steep but not inaccessible sides,
and a long
flat top. Omri, the king of Israel, purchased this
hill from
Shemer its owner for two talents of silver, and
built on its
broad summit the city to which he gave the name of
"Shomeron",
i.e., Samaria, as the new capital of his kingdom
instead of
Tirzah (1 Kings 16:24). As such it possessed many
advantages.
Here Omri resided during the last six years of his
reign. As the
result of an unsuccessful war with Syria, he appears
to have
been obliged to grant to the Syrians the right to
"make streets
in Samaria", i.e., probably permission to the Syrian
merchants
to carry on their trade in the Israelite capital.
This would
imply the existence of a considerable Syrian
population. "It was
the only great city of Israel created by the
sovereign. All
the others had been already consecrated by
patriarchal tradition
or previous possession. But Samaria was the choice
of Omri
alone. He, indeed, gave to the city which he had
built the name
of its former owner, but its especial connection
with himself as
its founder is proved by the designation which it
seems Samaria
bears in Assyrian inscriptions, Beth-khumri ('the
house or
palace of Omri').", Stanley.
Samaria was frequently besieged. In the days of
Ahab, Benhadad
II. came up against it with thirty-two vassal kings,
but was
defeated with a great slaughter (1 Kings 20:1-21). A
second
time, next year, he assailed it; but was again
utterly routed,
and was compelled to surrender to Ahab (20:28-34),
whose army,
as compared with that of Benhadad, was no more than
"two little
flocks of kids."
In the days of Jehoram this Benhadad again laid
siege to
Samaria, during which the city was reduced to the
direst
extremities. But just when success seemed to be
within their
reach, they suddenly broke up the seige, alarmed by
a mysterious
noise of chariots and horses and a great army, and
fled, leaving
their camp with all its contents behind them. The
famishing
inhabitants of the city were soon relieved...
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