Zoan in Smiths Bible Dictionary
            (place of departure), an ancient city of lower Egypt, 
called Tanis by the Greeks. It stood on the eastern bank of 
the Tanitic branch of the Nile. Its name indicates a place 
of departure from a country, and hence it has been 
identified with Avaris (Tanis, the modern San), the capital 
of the Shepherd dynasty in Egypt, built seven years after 
Hebron and existing before the time of Abraham. It was taken 
by the Shepherd kings in their invasion of Egypt, and by 
them rebuilt, and garrisoned, according to Manetho, with 
240,000 men. This cite is mentioned in connection with the 
plagues in such a manner as to leave no doubt that it is the 
city spoken of in the narrative in Exodus as that where 
Pharaoh dwelt, Ps 78:42,43 and where Moses wrought his 
wonders on the field of Zoan a rich plain extending thirty 
miles toward the east. Tanis gave its name to the twenty-
first and twenty-third dynasties and hence its mention in 
Isaiah. Isa 19:13 30:4 (The present "field of Zoan" is a 
barren waste, very thinly inhabited. "One of the principal 
capitals of Pharaoh is now the habitation of fishermen the 
resort of wild beasts, and infested with reptiles and 
malignant fevers." There have been discovered a great number 
of monuments here which throw light upon the Bible history. 
Brugsch refers to two statues of colossal size of Mermesha 
of the thirteenth dynasty, wonderfully perfect in the 
execution of the individual parts and says that memorials of 
Rameses the Great lie scattered broadcast like the 
mouldering bones of generations slain long ago. The area of 
the sacred enclosure of the temple is 1500 feet by 1250.-
ED.)
                          
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