Sidon in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
("fishing town"); SIDON or ZIDON. Genesis 10:9; Genesis
10:15; Joshua 11:8; Joshua 19:28; Judges 1:31. Sidon was in
Asher (Isaiah 23:2; Isaiah 23:4; Isaiah 23:12). An ancient
mercantile city of Phoenicia, in the narrow plain between
Lebanon and the Mediterranean, where the mountains recede
two miles from the sea; 20 miles N. of Tyre. Now Saida. Old
Sidon stands on the northern slope of a promontory
projecting a few hundred yards into the sea, having thus "a
fine naturally formed harbour" (Strabo). The citadel
occupies the hill behind on the south. Sidon is called
(Genesis 10:15) the firstborn of Canaan, and "great Sidon"
or the metropolis (Joshua 11:8). Sidonians is the generic
name of the Phoenicians or Canaanites (Joshua 13:6; Judges
18:7); in Judges 18:28 Laish is said to be "far from Sidon,"
whereas Tyre, 20 miles nearer, would have been specified if
it had then been a city of leading importance. (See TYRE.)
So in Homer Sidon is named, but not Tyre.
Justin Martyr makes (Judges 18:3) Tyre a colony
planted by Sidon when the king of Ascalon took Sidon the
year before the fall of Troy. Tyre is first mentioned in
Scripture in Joshua 19:29 as "the strong city," the
"daughter of Sidon" (Isaiah 23:12.) Sidon and Sidonians are
names often subsequently used for Tyre, Tyrians. Thus
Ethbaal, king of the Sidonians (1 Kings 16:31), is called by
Menander in Josephus (Ant. 8:13, section 2) king of the
Tyrians. By the time of Zechariah (Zechariah 9:2) Tyre has
the precedency, "Tyrus and Sidon." Sidon revolted from the
yoke of Tyre when Shalmaneser's invasion gave the
opportunity. Rivalry with Tyre influenced Sidon to submit
without resistance to Nebuchadnezzar. Its rebellion against
the Persian Artaxerxes Ochus entailed great havoc on its
citizens, Tennes its king proving traitor. Its fleet helped
Alexander the Great against Tyre (Arrian, Anab. Al., 2:15).
Augustus took away its liberties. Its population is
now 5,000. Its trade and navigation have left it for Beirut.
It was famed for elaborate embroidery, working of metals
artistically, glass, the blowpipe, lathe, and graver, and
cast mirrors. (Pliny 36:26, H. N. 5:17; 1 Kings 5:6, "not
any can skill to hew timber like unto the Sidonians".) Their
seafaring is alluded to (Isaiah 23:2). Self indulgent ease
followed in the train of their wealth, so that "the manner
of the Sidonians" was proverbial (Judges 18:7).. Sidon had
her own king (Jeremiah 25:22; Jeremiah 27:3). Sidonian women
in Solomon's harem seduced him to worship Ashtoreth "the
goddess of the Sidonians" (1 Kings 11:1; 1 Kings 11:4; 2
Kings 23:13).
Joel reproves Sidon and Tyre for selling children of
Judah and Jerusalem to the Grecians, and threatens them with
a like fate, Judah selling their sons and daughters to the
Sabeans. So Ezekiel (Ezekiel 28:22-24) threatens Sidon with
pestilence and blood in her streets, so that she shall be no
more a pricking brier unto Israel. Jesus went once to the
coasts of Tyre and Sidon (Matthew 15:21). Paul touched at
Sidon on his voyage from Caesarea to Rome (Acts 27:3); by
Julius' courteous permission Paul there "went unto his
friends to refresh himself." Tyre and Sidon's doom shall be
more tolerable in the day of judgment than that of those who
witnessed Christ's works and teaching, yet repented not
(Matthew 11:21-22). On a coin of the age of Antiochus IV
Tyre claims to be "mother of the Sidonians," being at that
time the capital city.
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