Zion in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
            zi'-on (tsiyon; Sion):LITERATURE
1. Meaning of the Word:
A name applied to Jerusalem, or to certain parts of it, at 
least since the time of David. Nothing certain is known of 
the meaning. Gesenius and others have derived it from a 
Hebrew root tsahah, "to be dry"; Delitzsch from tsiwwah, "to 
set up" and Wetzstein from tsin, "to protect." Gesenius 
finds a more hopeful suggestion in the Arabic equivalent 
cihw, the Arabic cahwat signifying "ridge of a mountain" or 
"citadel," which at any rate suitably applies to what we 
know to have been the original Zion (compare Smith, HGHL, 
under the word).
Considerable confusion has been caused in the past by the 
want of clear understanding regarding the different sites 
which have respectively been called "Zion" during the 
centuries. It will make matters clearer if we take the 
application of the name: in David's time; in the early 
Prophets, etc.; in late poetical writings and in the 
Apocrypha; and in Christian times.
2. The Zion of the Jebusites:
Jerus (in the form Uru-sa-lim) is the oldest name we know 
for this city; it goes back at least 400 years before David. 
In 2 Sam 5:6-9, "The king and his men went to Jerusalem 
against the Jebusites. .... Nevertheless David took the 
stronghold of Zion; the same is the city of David .... And 
David dwelt in the stronghold, and called it the city of 
David." It is evident that Zion was the name of the citadel 
of the Jebusite city of Jerusalem. That this citadel and 
incidentally then city of Jerusalem around it were on the 
long ridge running South of the Temple (called the 
southeastern hill in the article JERUSALEM, III, (3) (which 
see)) is now accepted by almost all modern scholars, mainly 
on the following grounds:
(1) The near proximity of the site to the only known spring, 
now the "Virgin's Fount," once called GIHON (which see). 
From our knowledge of other ancient sites all over 
Israel, as well as on grounds of common-sense, it is 
hardly possible to believe that the early inhabitants of 
this site with such an abundant source at their very doors 
could have made any other spot their headquarters.
(2) The suitability of the site for defense.--The sites 
suited for settlement in early Canaanite times were all, if 
we may judge from a number of them now known, of this 
nature--a rocky spur isolated on three sides by steep 
valleys, and, in many sites, protected at the end where they 
join the main mountain ridge by either a valley or a rocky 
spur.
(3) The size of the ridge, though very small to our modern 
ideas, is far more in keeping with what we know of fortified 
towns of that period than such an area as presented by the 
southwestern hill--the traditional site of Zion. Mr. 
Macalister found by actual excavation that the great walls 
of Gezer, which must have been contemporaneous with the 
Jebusite Jerusalem, measured approximately 4,500 feet in 
circumference. G. A. Smith has calculated that a line of 
wall carried along the known and inferred scarps around the 
edge of this southeastern hill would have an approximate 
circumference of 4,250 feet. The suitability of the site to 
a fortified city like Gezer, Megiddo, Soco, and other sites 
which have been excavated, strikes anyone familiar with 
these places.
(4) The archaeological remains on these hills found by 
Warren and Professor Guthe, and more particularly in the 
recent excavations of Captain Parker (see JERUSALEM), show 
without doubt that this was the earliest settlement in pre-
Israelite times. Extensive curves and rock-cuttings, cave-
dwellings and tombs, and enormous quantities of early 
"Amorite" (what may be popularly called "Jebusite") pottery 
show that the spot must have been inhabited many centuries 
before the time of David. The reverse is equally true; on no 
other part of the Jerusalem site has any quantity of such 
early pottery been found.
(5) The Bible evidence that Zion originally occupied this 
site is clear. It will be found more in detail under the 
heading "City of David" in the article JERUSALEM, IV, (5), 
but three points may be mentioned here: (a) The Ark of the 
Covenant was brought up out of the city of David to the 
Temple (1 Ki 8:1; 2 Ch 5:2), and Pharaoh's daughter "came up 
out of the city of David unto her house which Solomon had 
built for her"--adjacent to the Temple (1 Ki 9:24). This 
expression "up" could not be used of any other hill than of 
the lower-lying eastern ridge; to go from the southwestern 
hill (traditional Zion) to the Temple is to go down. (b) 
Hezekiah constructed the well-known Siloam tunnel from Gihon 
to the Pool of Siloam. He is described (2 Ch 32:30) as 
bringing the waters of Gihon "straight down on the west side 
of the city of David." (c) Manasseh (2 Ch 33:14) built "an 
outer wall to the city of David, on the west side of Gihon, 
in the valley" (i.e. nachal--the name of the Kedron valley).
3. Zion of the Prophets:
Zion, renamed the City of David, then originally...
                          
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