Timnah in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
tim'-na (timnah, timnathah (Josh 19:43; Jdg 14:1,2,5),
"allotted portion; Codex Vaticanus Thamnatha; also several
Greek variations; King James Version has Timnath in Gen
38:12,13,14; Jdg 14:1,2,5; and Thimnathah in Josh 19:43):
(1) A town in the southern part of the hill country of Judah
(Josh 15:57). Tibna proposed by Conder, a ruin 8 miles West
of Bethlehem, seems too far N. (PEF, III, 53, Sh XVII). It
is possible this may be the "Timnah" of Gen 38:12,13,14.
(2) A town on the northern border of Judah (Josh 15:10),
lying between Beth-shemesh and Ekron. It is probably the
same Timnah as Judah visited (Gen 38:12-14), and certainly
the scene of Samson's adventures (Jdg 14:1 f); his "father-
in-law" is called a "Timnite" (Jdg 15:6). At this time the
place is clearly Philistine (Jdg 14:1), though in Josh 19:43
it is reckoned to Dan. Being on the frontier, it probably
changed hands several times. In 2 Ch 28:18 it was captured
from the Philistines by Ahaz, and we learn from Assyrian
evidence (Prison Inscription) that Sennacherib captured a
Tamna after the battle of Alteka before he besieged Ekron
(Schrader, Die Keilinschriften und das Altes Testament,
170). The site is undoubted. It is now a deserted ruin
called Tibneh on the southern slopes of the Wady es Surar
(Valley of Sorek), about 2 miles West of Beth-shemesh. There
is a spring, and there are evident signs of antiquity (PEF,
II, 417, 441, Sh XVI).
(3) There was probably a Timna in Edom (Gen 36:12,22,40; 1
Ch 1:39,51). Eusebius and Jerome (in Onomasticon) recognized
a Thamna in Edom at their time.
(4) The "Thamnatha" of 1 Macc 9:50 (the King James Version)
is probably another Timnah, and identical with the Thamna of
Josephus (BJ, III, iii, 5; IV, viii, 1). This is probably
the Tibneh, 10 miles Northwest of Bethel, an extensive ruin.
E. W. G. Masterman
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