Tubal in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Genesis 10:2; 1 Chronicles 1:5; Isaiah 56:19. Tubal, Javan,
and Meshech are the associated sons of Japheth. They brought
slaves (beautiful ones abounded in the Euxine coasts, and
were traded in by the Cappadocians: Polyb. 4:38, section 4)
and copper vessels to the Phoenician markets (copper and
metals of the neighbouring Mossynaeci and Chalybes were
famed, and copper mines were at Chalvar in Armenia): Ezekiel
27:13; nations of the north (Ezekiel 32:26; Ezekiel 38:2-3;
Ezekiel 38:15; Ezekiel 39:1-2). Gog is their chief prince.
Tubal answers to the Tibareni, as Meshech to the Moschi;
close to one another, on the northern coast of Asia Minor,
about the river Melanthius (Melet Irmak), in Herodotus' and
Xenophon's days; previously among the most powerful races.
The Assyrian monarchs from 1100 to 700 B.C. were
often warring with the Muskai and Tuplai, E. of the Taurus
range, and occupying the region afterward called Cappadocia,
Rawlinson (Herodotus i. 535) makes them Turaniaus (the
scholiast on Apollonius Rhodius, ii. 1010, calls them
Scythians) who spread over the entire region between the
Mediterranean and India, the Persian gulf and Caucasus. In
Sargon's time, according to inscriptions, Ambris, son of
Khuliya, was their hereditary chief, and by alliance with
the kings of Musak and Vararat (Mesech and Ararat) who were
revolting from Assyria. drew on himself the hostility of
that monarch. Xenophon (Anabasis vii. 8, section 25) says
the Tibareni were then an independent tribe; 24 kings of the
Tuplai in previous ages are mentioned in Assyrian
inscriptions (Hincks in Rawlinson's Herodotus i. 380 note).
Rich in flocks (Apollon. Rhod., Arg. 2:377).
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