Well in Smiths Bible Dictionary
Wells in Israel are usually excavated from the solid
limestone rock, sometimes with steps to descend into them.
Ge 24:16 The brims are furnished with a curb or low wall of
stone, bearing marks of high antiquity in the furrows worn
by the ropes used in drawing water. It was on a curb of this
sort that our Lord sat when he conversed with the woman of
Samaria, Joh 4:6 and it was this, the usual stone cover,
which the woman placed on the mouth of the well at Bahurim,
2Sa 17:19 where the Authorized Version weakens the sense by
omitting the article. The usual methods for raising water
are the following:
1. The rope and bucket, or waterskin. Ge 24:14-20;
Joh 4:11
2. The sakiyeh, or Persian wheel. This consists of a
vertical wheel furnished with a set of buckets or earthen
jars attached to a cord passing over the wheel. which
descend empty and return full as the wheel revolves.
3. A modification of the last method, by which a
man, sitting opposite to a wheel furnished with buckets,
turns it by drawing with his hands one set of spokes
prolonged beyond its circumference, and pushing another set
from him with his feet.
4. A method very common in both ancient and modern
Egypt is the shadoof, a simple contrivance consisting of a
lever moving on a pivot, which is loaded at one end with a
lump of clay or some other weight, and has at the other a
bowl or bucket. Wells are usually furnished with troughs of
wood or stone into which the water is emptied for the use of
persons or animals coming to the wells. Unless machinery is
used, which is commonly worked by men, women are usually the
water-carriers.
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