בֵּית רְחוֹב
Beth-Rechob, a place in Palestine
Definition
Beth-Rechob is a proper name for a town or region in ancient Palestine, meaning 'house of the street' or 'house of the broad place.' It appears in two distinct contexts: first, as a location near the northern Israelite tribe of Dan, referenced in Judges 18:28 as a place untouched during the Danites' conquest of Laish. Second, it is mentioned in 2 Samuel 10:6 as a Syrian/Aramean city-state that allied with other Aramean forces against King David. These references suggest it was a significant, possibly fortified, settlement in the northern reaches of Israel's territory, associated with Aramean influence.
Biblical Usage
Beth-Rechob is used only twice in the Old Testament, both times as a geographical identifier. In Judges 18:28, it describes a nearby settlement that was not attacked, situating the narrative in the tribal allotment of Dan. In 2 Samuel 10:6, it is listed among the Aramean kingdoms that hired mercenaries to fight Israel, indicating its political alignment and location in or near Syria. The usage consistently marks it as a place name in northern Palestine, involved in both tribal and international conflicts.
Etymology
The name is a compound of two Hebrew words: בַּיִת (bayith, H1004), meaning 'house' or 'household,' and רְחֹב (rechob, H7339), meaning 'broad place,' 'street,' or 'plaza.' Thus, it literally translates to 'house of the street,' which may refer to a town centered around a public square or a prominent open area, a common feature for communal life and trade in ancient Near Eastern settlements.
Semantic Range
While Beth-Rechob itself is not a central theological term, its appearances contribute to the biblical narrative of Israel's territorial and political struggles. In Judges 18, its mention highlights the incomplete conquest and isolation of the Danites, reflecting themes of tribal disobedience and settlement. In 2 Samuel 10, its role in Aramean opposition underscores God's protection of David's kingdom, as seen in the subsequent Israelite victory. Understanding its location enriches the historical context of God's dealings with Israel and its neighbors.
In the ancient Near East, place names often described physical or social characteristics of a location. 'House of the street' likely denoted a settlement organized around a central, open plaza—a common urban design for markets, gatherings, and civic activities. As an Aramean city-state, Beth-Rechob would have been part of the complex network of small kingdoms in Syria-Palestine, frequently engaging in alliances and conflicts, which is reflected in its biblical portrayal as both a neutral neighbor and a military adversary.
צָרְפַת (Tsarephath, H6886) — another northern place name, but a Phoenician city, not Aramean. דַּמֶּשֶׂק (Dammeseq, H1834) — Damascus, a major Aramean capital, whereas Beth-Rechob was a smaller polity. לַחִישׁ (Lachish, H3923) — a fortified Canaanite city, similar in being a strategic settlement, but located in Judah, not the north.
Word Details
How this works
Hebrew definitions are from Brown-Driver-Briggs (1906) and Strong's Exhaustive Concordance (1890), both public domain. BDB was groundbreaking for its era but reflects 19th-century assumptions about Semitic etymology. Modern scholarship (HALOT, DCH) has revised many entries. Use these definitions as a starting point for exploration, not as the final word on a term's meaning in context.
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