Samaria in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(watch mountain). This city is situated 30 miles north of
Jerusalem and about six miles to the northwest of Shechem,
in a wide basin-shaped valley, six miles in diameter,
encircled with high hills, almost on the edge of the great
plain which borders upon the Mediterranean. In the centre of
this basin, which is on a lower level than the valley of
Shechem, rises a less elevated hill, with steep yet
accessible sides and a long fiat top. This hill was chosen
by Omri as the site of the capital of the kingdom of Israel.
He "bought the hill of Samaria of Shemer for two talents of
silver, and built on the hill, and called the name of the
city which he built, after the name of the owner of the
hill, Samaria." 1Ki 16:23,24 From the that of Omri's
purchase, B.C. 925, Samaria retained its dignity as the
capital of the ten tribes, and the name is given to the
northern kingdom as well as to the city. Ahab built a temple
to Baal there. 1Ki 16:32,33 It was twice besieged by the
Syrians, in B.C. 901, 1Ki 20:1 and in B.C. 892, 2Ki 6:24-7,
2Ki 6:20 but on both occasions the siege was ineffectual.
The possessor of Samaria was considered de facto king of
Israel. 2Ki 15:13,14 In B.C. 721 Samaria was taken, after a
siege of three years, by Shalmaneser king of Assyria, 2Ki
18:9,10 and the kingdom of the ten tribes was put an end to.
Some years afterward the district of which Samaria was the
centre was repeopled by Esarhaddon. Alexander the Great took
the city, killed a large portion of the inhabitants, and
suffered the remainder to set it at Shechem. He replaced
them by a colony of Syro-Macedonians who occupied the city
until the time of John Hyrcanus, who took it after a year's
siege, and did his best to demolish it entirely. (B.C. 109.)
It was rebuilt and greatly embellished by Herod the Great.
He called it Sebaste=Augusta, after the name of his patron,
Augustus Caesar. The wall around it was 2 1/2 miles long,
and in the centre of the city was a park 900 feet square
containing a magnificent temple dedicated to Caesar. In the
New Testament the city itself does not appear to be
mentioned; but rather a portion of the district to which,
even in older times it had extended its name. Mt 10:5; Joh
4:4,5 At this clay the city is represented by a small
village retaining few vestiges of the past except its name,
Sebustiyeh, an Arabic corruption of Sebaste. Some
architectural remains it has, partly of Christian
construction or adaptation, as the ruined church of St. John
the Baptist, partly, perhaps, traces of Idumaean
magnificence, St. Jerome, whose acquaintance with Israel
imparts a sort of probability to the tradition which
prevailed so strongly in later days, asserts that Sebaste,
which he invariably identifies with Samaria was the place in
which St. John the Baptist was imprisoned and suffered
death. He also makes it the burial-place of the prophets
Elisha and Obadiah.
Read More about Samaria in Smiths Bible Dictionary