גְּשׁוּר
Geshur, a district of Syria
Definition
Geshur refers to a small Aramean kingdom located east of the Sea of Galilee, in the region of Bashan (Joshua 13:13). It is most significant in the biblical narrative as the homeland of King David's wife, Maacah, and thus the kingdom of his son Absalom's maternal grandfather (2 Samuel 3:3). The territory remained unconquered by the Israelites during the conquest of Canaan. Later, it served as a place of refuge for Absalom after he murdered his brother Amnon, where he stayed for three years (2 Samuel 13:37-38).
Biblical Usage
The word is used exclusively as a proper noun for a geographical region and its people (the Geshurites). It appears in historical books detailing land allotments (Joshua), royal lineage and political marriages (2 Samuel, 1 Chronicles), and as a specific location for exile and return. Its usage is concentrated in the stories of David's family and the unresolved conquests in Joshua. Key verses include Joshua 13:13 (land not taken) and 2 Samuel 13:37-38 (Absalom's flight).
Etymology
Derived from the Hebrew root גָּשַׁר (gāshar, H1650*), meaning 'to join' or 'to bridge.' The name likely describes the region's geographical role as a 'bridge' or connecting point between Aramean territories and Israel, or possibly a place where a notable bridge existed. This root is unused in Biblical Hebrew but is seen in later Hebrew and cognate languages.
Semantic Range
Geshur represents the incomplete fulfillment of God's promise to give Israel the land, as noted in Joshua 13:13. Its role in the Davidic narrative highlights themes of political alliance through marriage, the consequences of sin (Absalom's exile there), and the complex, often troubled, relationships between Israel and its neighboring kingdoms. It serves as a tangible reminder of the lingering foreign influences and safe havens that existed within the promised borders.
As an independent Aramean kingdom, Geshur maintained its own monarchy and identity despite proximity to Israel. David's marriage to Maacah, a Geshurite princess (2 Samuel 3:3), was a strategic political alliance common among ancient Near Eastern monarchs to secure borders and forge treaties. Absalom's retreat there underscores that it was a sovereign territory beyond David's immediate jurisdiction, a safe haven for political fugitives.
אֲרָם (ʼĂrām, H758) — Aram; the broader Aramean region/nation to which Geshur belonged. בָּשָׁן (Bāshān, H1316) — Bashan; the larger, fertile region where Geshur was located.
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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