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Samaria, Province
In the time of Christ, Western Palestine was divided into three provinces,
Judea, Samaria, and Galilee. Samaria occupied the centre of Palestine (John
4:4). It is called in the Talmud the "land of the Cuthim," and is not regarded
as a part of the Holy Land at all. It may be noticed that the distance between
Samaria and Jerusalem, the respective capitals of the two kingdoms, is only 35
miles in a direct line.
A watch-mountain or a watch-tower. In the heart of the mountains of
Israel, a few miles north-west of Shechem, stands the "hill of Shomeron," a
solitary mountain, a great "mamelon." It is an oblong hill, with steep but not
inaccessible sides, and a long flat top.
Omri, the king of Israel, purchased this hill from Shemer its owner for two
talents of silver, and built on its broad summit the city to which he gave the
name of 'shomeron", i.e., Samaria, as the new capital of his kingdom instead of
Tirzah (1 Kings 16:24). As such it possessed many advantages.
Here Omri resided during the last six years of his reign. As the result of an
unsuccessful war with Syria, he appears to have been obliged to grant to the
Syrians the right to "make streets in Samaria", i.e., probably permission to
the Syrian merchants to carry on their trade in the Israelite capital. This
would imply the existence of a considerable Syrian population. "It was the only
great city of Palestine created by the sovereign. All the others had been
already consecrated by patriarchal tradition or previous possession.
But Samaria was the choice of Omri alone. He, indeed, gave to the city which he
had built the name of its former owner, but its especial connection with
himself as its founder is proved by the designation which it seems Samaria
bears in Assyrian inscriptions, Beth-khumri (the house or palace of Omri)."
Stanley.
Samaria was frequently besieged. In the days of Ahab, Benhadad II. came up
against it with thirty-two vassal kings, but was defeated with a great
slaughter (1 Kings 20:1-21). A second time, next year, he assailed it; but was
again utterly routed, and was compelled to surrender to Ahab (20:28-34), whose
army, as compared with that of Benhadad, was no more than "two little flocks of
kids."
In the days of Jehoram this Benhadad again laid siege to Samaria, during which
the city was reduced to the direst extremities. But just when success seemed to
be within their reach, they suddenly broke up the seige, alarmed by a
mysterious noise of chariots and horses and a great army, and fled, leaving
their camp with all its contents behind them. The famishing inhabitants of the
city were soon relieved with the abundance of the spoil of the Syrian camp; and
it came to pass, according to the word of Elisha, that "a measure of fine flour
was sold for a shekel, and two measures of barely for a shekel, in the gates of
Samaria" (2 Kings 7:1-20).
Shalmaneser invaded Israel in the days of Hoshea, and reduced it to vassalage.
He laid siege to Samaria (B.C. 723), which held out for three years, and was at
length captured by Sargon, who completed the conquest Shalmaneser had begun (2
Kings 18:9-12; 17:3), and removed vast numbers of the tribes into captivity.
(See SARGON.)
The city, after passing through various vicissitudes, was given by the emperor
Augustus to Herod the Great, who rebuilt it, and called it Sebaste (Gr. form of
Augustus) in honour of the emperor.
In the New Testament the only mention of it is in Acts 8:5-14, where it is
recorded that Philip went down to the city of Samaria and preached there.
It is now represented by the hamlet of Sebustieh, containing about three
hundred inhabitants. The ruins of the ancient town are all scattered over the
hill, down the sides of which they have rolled. The shafts of about one hundred
of what must have been grand Corinthian columns are still standing, and attract
much attention, although nothing definite is known regarding them. (Comp. Micah
1:6.)
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