בׇּצְקַת
Botscath, a place in Palestine
Definition
Botsqath (also spelled Bozcath or Boskath) is a proper noun referring to a town in the ancient kingdom of Judah. It was located in the Shephelah, the lowland region between the Judean hills and the coastal plain, as part of the inheritance of the tribe of Judah (Joshua 15:39). The town is most notably identified as the birthplace of King Josiah's maternal grandfather, Adaiah (2 Kings 22:1). Its name, derived from a root meaning 'swelling' or 'hillock,' likely describes its physical setting on a small, rounded elevation.
Biblical Usage
Botsqath appears only twice in the Old Testament, both times as a geographical identifier. In Joshua 15:39, it is listed among the towns allotted to the tribe of Judah in the Shephelah district. In 2 Kings 22:1, it is used to specify the origin of Adaiah, the grandfather of the righteous King Josiah, connecting the king's lineage to this specific Judean town.
Etymology
The name Botsqath derives from the Hebrew root בָּצֵק (batsaq, H1216), which means 'to swell up' or 'to be lofty.' It is a feminine noun form indicating 'a swell of ground' or 'a hillock.' This etymology directly describes the town's likely physical topography, situated on a small, prominent rise in the landscape.
Semantic Range
While Botsqath itself is not the focus of major theological themes, its mention in 2 Kings 22:1 provides a subtle connection to the narrative of King Josiah, one of Judah's last righteous kings who initiated a great religious reformation. Knowing the meaning ('hillock') and location of his ancestral town can enrich the reader's sense of Josiah's rootedness in the tribal lands of Judah, the tribe from which the Davidic line of kings descended.
As a town in the Judean Shephelah, Botsqath was part of a vital agricultural and defensive border region. Its name reflecting the local terrain was a common practice for place-names in ancient Israel, serving as a practical geographical descriptor. Being recorded in a town list (Joshua 15) and a genealogical note (2 Kings 22) demonstrates how one's hometown was a key part of personal and familial identity in Israelite culture.
Gib'ah (H1389) — A more common term for 'hill' or 'high place,' often used for larger or more significant elevations, sometimes with cultic associations. Har (H2022) — The primary word for 'mountain' or 'hill country,' denoting a much larger range or prominent peak.
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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