Tekoa in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
2 Samuel 14:2. A town of Judah (2 Chronicles 11:6). Six
Roman miles from Bethlehem, (to the S.E.,) which was six
miles S. of Jerusalem. Tekoa was thus 12 from Jerusalem
(Eusebius), but only nine by a shorter route (Jerome). The
wise woman whom Joab suborned to persuade David to restore
Absalom belonged to Tekoa (2 Samuel 14). Rehoboam fortified
it (2 Chronicles 11:6). It was Amos' birthplace. Jeremiah,
warning Judah to flee southward from the enemy advancing
from the N. (Jeremiah 6:1), plays upon the sound tikehu
Tekoa, "blow the trumpet in Tekoa." The derivation taaqa'
"to strike" alludes to the stakes struck into the ground to
secure the tents of the shepherds who roamed in "the
wilderness of Tekoa," which was E. of the town or cluster of
pastoral tents. Ira, one of David's thirty mighties, was a
Tekoite (2 Samuel 23:26).
The Tekoites repaired the wall under Nehemiah
(Nehemiah 3:5; Nehemiah 3:27); but "their nobles put not
their necks to the work of their Lord." Contrast Nehemiah
4:6, "the people had a mind to work" (Judges 5:28;
Colossians 3:28). Amos' familiarity with the Tekoa desert
and the danger of a shepherd's life affected his style. (See
AMOS.) In the lists of Judah (1 Chronicles 2:24; 1
Chronicles 4:5) Ashur, Hezron's posthumous son and Caleb's
brother, is mentioned as father, i.e. founder or prince, of
Tekoa. Now Teku'a; within sight of "the Frank mountain," the
site of Herod's castle, formerly Bethhaccerem; broken
columns, heaps of bevelled stones, cisterns,and square
foundations of houses, mark the site which is on a broad
topped hill, with the remains of a square tower at the N.E.;
it commands the view of the level range of the Moabite
mountains, affording frequent glimpses of the Dead Sea. (See
BETHHACCEREM.)
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