Sychar in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
John 4:5. Shechem or Nablus (Jerome Quaest. Genesis 48:22)
corrupted into Sichem, Sychar. Some think it an intentional
corruption, as if from sheker "falsehood," or shikor
"drunkard" (Isaiah 28:1; Isaiah 28:7), due to Jewish bigotry
against the Samaritans. It is objected that Jacob's well at
the entrance into the valley is a mile and a half from
Shechem, and that it is unlikely the woman, if belonging to
Shechem, would go so far for water when plenty was nearer at
hand; but Robinson conjectures the town had extensive
suburbs anciently which reached to near Jacob's well. The
woman probably went to this well, irrespectively of
distance, just because it was Jacob's; her looking for
"Messiah" is in consonance with this, besides the well was
deep and the water therefore especially good. However Sychar
may have been close to the well; and (Thomson, Land and
Book, 31) the present village, Aschar, just above Jacob's
well, on the side of Ebal and on the road by which caravans
pass from Jerusalem to Damascus, and by which doubtless
Jesus passed between Judaea and Galilee, may answer to
Sychar.
So Jerome and Eusebius (Onomasticon) make S.
"before," i.e. E. of, Neapolis (Shechem) by the field of
Joseph with Jacob's well. The Bordeaux pilgrim (A.D. 333)
puts Sechar or Sychar a Roman mile from Sychem, which he
makes a suburb of Neapolis. "A city of Samaria called
Sychar" is language not likely to be used of the metropolis
Shechem; moreover the name Sychem occurs Acts 7:16. On the
other hand "called" suits the idea that Sychar is a Jewish
nickname for Shechem. Lt. Conder favors Aschar, which is the
translation of the Samaritan Iskar, not from the Hebrew
"drunkard," but from a Hebrew Aramaic root meaning "to be
shut up." This derivation and the description in John 4:5-6
answer accurately to Aschar. Jacob's well is at the point
where the narrow vale of Shechem broadens into the great
plain; it is 2,000 yards E. of Nablus (Shechem), which is
hidden from it. The tomb of Joseph is a third of a mile
northeastward, thence a path ascends to Aschar which is
visible from Jacob's well. frontIsrael Exploration
Quarterly Statement, July 1877, p. 149.)
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