Shechem in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(back or shoulder).
1. An important city in central Israel, in the
valley between mounts Ebal and Gerizim, 34 miles north of
Jerusalem and 7 miles southeast of Samaria. Its present
name, Nablus, is a corruption of Neapolis, which succeeded
the more ancient Shechem, and received its new name from
Vespasian. On coins still extant it is called Flavia
Neapolis. The situation of the town is one of surpassing
beauty. It lies in a sheltered valley, protected by Gerizim
on the south and Ebal on the north. The feet of these
mountains, where they rise from the town, are not more than
five hundred yards apart. The bottom of the valley is about
1800 feet above the level of the sea, and the top of Gerizim
800 feet higher still. The sit of the present city, which
was also that of the Hebrew city, occurs exactly on the
water-summit; and streams issuing from the numerous springs
there flow down the opposite slopes of the valley, spreading
verdure and fertility in every direction. Travellers vie
with each other in the language which they employ to
describe the scene that here bursts so suddenly upon them on
arriving in spring or early summer at this paradise of the
holy land. "The whole valley," says Dr. Robinson, "was
filled with gardens of vegetables and orchards of all kinds
of fruits, watered by fountains which burst forth in various
parts and flow westward in refreshing streams. it came upon
us suddenly like a scene of fairy enchantment. We saw
nothing to compare with it in all Israel." The allusions to
Shechem in the Bible are numerous, and show how important
the place was in Jewish history. Abraham, on his first
migration to the land of promise, pitched his tent and built
an altar under the oak (or terebinth) of Moreh at Shechem.
"The Canaanite was then in the land;" and it is evident that
the region, if not the city, was already in possession of
the aboriginal race. See Ge 12:6 At the time of Jacob's
arrival here, after his sojourn in Mesopotamia, Ge 33:18; 34
Shechem was a Hivite city, of which Hamor, the father of
Shechem, was the headman. it was at this time that the
patriarch purchased from that chieftain "the parcel of the
field" which he subsequently bequeathed, as a special
patrimony, to his son Joseph. Ge 33:19; Jos 24:32; Joh 4:5
The field lay undoubtedly on the rich plain of the Mukhna,
and its value was the greater on account of the well which
Jacob had dug there, so as not to be dependent on his
neighbors for a supply of water. In the distribution of the
land after its conquest by the Hebrews, Shechem fell to the
lot of Ephraim, Jos 20:7 but was assigned to the Levites,
and became a city of refuge. Jos 21:20,21 It acquired new
importance as the scene of the renewed promulgation of the
law, when its blessings were heard from Gerizim and its
curses from Ebal, and the people bowed their heads and
acknowledged Jehovah as their king and ruler. De 27:11; Jos
24:23-25 it was here Joshua assembled the people, shortly
before his death, and delivered to them his last counsels.
Jos 24:1,25 After the death of Gideon, Abimelech, his
bastard son, induced the Shechemites to revolt from the
Hebrew commonwealth and elect him as king. Jud 9:1 ... In
revenge for his expulsion after a reign of three years,
Abimelech destroyed the city, and as an emblem of the fate
to which he would consign it, sowed the ground with salt.
Jud 9:34-45 It was soon restored, however, for we are told
in 1Ki 12:1 ... that all Israel assembled at Shechem, and
Rehoboam, Solomon's successor, went thither to be
inaugurated as king. here, at this same place, the ten
tribes renounced the house of David, and transferred their
allegiance to Jeroboam, 1Ki 12:16 under whom Shechem became
for a time the capital of his kingdom. From the time of the
origin of the Samaritans, the history of Shechem blends
itself with that of this people and of their sacred mount,
Gerizim. [SAMARIA] Shechem reappears in the New Testament.
It is the SYCHAR of...
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