מְגִדּוֹן
Megiddon or Megiddo, a place in Palestine
Definition
Megiddo (or Megiddon) is a strategically important city in ancient Palestine, located in the Jezreel Valley. It was a fortified Canaanite city conquered by the Israelites (Joshua 12:21) and later became a major administrative center under King Solomon, who fortified it (1 Kings 9:15). The name is most famously associated with the great eschatological battle in Revelation 16:16 (Armageddon, derived from 'Har Megiddo,' meaning 'Mount Megiddo'), though this specific phrase does not appear in the Hebrew Bible. Historically, it was the site of several significant battles, including the death of King Josiah (2 Kings 23:29).
Biblical Usage
The name appears 12 times in the Old Testament, primarily in historical and prophetic contexts. It is used in conquest narratives (Joshua 12:21, Judges 1:27), descriptions of Solomon's districts and building projects (1 Kings 4:12, 9:15), accounts of battles (Judges 5:19, 2 Kings 9:27, 23:29), and once in prophecy (Zechariah 12:11). Its usage consistently marks it as a place of military and political significance.
Etymology
Derived from the Hebrew root גָּדַד (gadad, H1413), meaning 'to cut,' 'to gather,' or 'to assemble troops.' The name likely means 'place of troops' or 'rendezvous,' fitting its historical role as a mustering point for armies and a frequent battlefield. The alternate form מְגִדּוֹ (Megiddo) is also used.
Semantic Range
Megiddo holds theological significance as a symbol of human conflict and divine judgment. Its history of repeated battles makes it a powerful geographic symbol of warfare. This culminates in the New Testament's apocalyptic imagery of Armageddon (Revelation 16:16), where the name is transformed into the ultimate symbol of the final confrontation between the forces of God and evil. Understanding its bloody history enriches the prophetic weight of this symbolism.
In its ancient Near Eastern context, Megiddo was a crucial fortified city guarding the major military and trade route through the Jezreel Valley. Controlling Megiddo meant controlling a key artery of the region. Its reputation as a perennial battlefield was well-established long before the biblical narratives, with archaeological evidence showing nearly 20 layers of destruction and rebuilding.
Har-Megiddon (הַר־מְגִדּוֹן) — The 'mount of Megiddo,' the Greek form of which is 'Armageddon' (Revelation 16:16).
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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