כְּסָלוֹן
Kesalon, a place in Palestine
Definition
Kesalon (כְּסָלוֹן) is a proper noun referring to a specific geographical location in ancient Palestine. It is identified as a town in the hill country of Judah, situated along the northern border of the tribe of Judah's territory. The sole biblical reference to Kesalon is in Joshua 15:10, where it serves as a boundary marker in the detailed description of Judah's inheritance. The name itself, meaning 'fertile' or 'confidence,' may reflect the nature of the land or the hope associated with the territory allotted to God's people.
Biblical Usage
The word כְּסָלוֹן is used only once in the Old Testament, exclusively in the context of geographical description. It appears in Joshua 15:10 as part of a list of towns and landmarks defining the borders of the tribal allotment for Judah. Its usage is purely locative, serving as a fixed point in a legal-territorial document. There are no other occurrences or varied usages in other biblical books.
Etymology
The name Kesalon derives from the Hebrew root כָּסַל (kāsal, H3688), which carries the primary meaning 'to be fat, stout, or robust,' and by extension, 'to be fertile' or 'to be foolish/confident.' As a place name, it likely draws on the positive connotation of fertility, describing a productive or robust location. It is a nominal form, indicating a place characterized by this quality.
Semantic Range
While Kesalon itself is a minor geographical location, its inclusion in Scripture is theologically significant. It is part of the meticulous record of God fulfilling His covenant promise to give the land of Canaan to the tribes of Israel (Genesis 15:18-21). Every border town listed, including Kesalon, testifies to God's faithfulness in detail and the concrete reality of the inheritance He provided. Understanding these names enriches reading by grounding biblical history in real, tangible geography.
In its original context, a place name like Kesalon functioned as a permanent legal marker in a tribal territory description. These boundary lists (Joshua 15:1-12) were vital for establishing identity, inheritance, and preventing disputes between tribes. The meaning of the name ('fertile') would have been immediately recognizable to an ancient Israelite, likely describing the agricultural potential or physical appearance of the site, which differs from a modern understanding of a place name as often just a label.
גְּבוּל (gᵉḇûl, H1366) — A general term for 'border' or 'boundary,' whereas Kesalon is a specific location on a border. שְׂדֵה (śᵉḏēh, H7704) — Refers to a 'field' or open country, not a named town like Kesalon.
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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