רָמַת לֶחִי
Ramath-Lechi, a place in Palestine
Definition
Ramath-Lechi is a proper noun referring to a specific location in ancient Palestine, meaning 'height of the jawbone' or 'Jawbone Heights.' It is the name given by Samson to the place where he defeated a thousand Philistines using the jawbone of a donkey (Judges 15:17). The name commemorates this dramatic event and serves as a geographical marker tied directly to the narrative of Samson's exploits. No other biblical passages reference this location, so its meaning is confined to this single, vivid story.
Biblical Usage
This word appears only once in the Old Testament, in Judges 15:17. It is used strictly as a place name that Samson himself coins immediately after his victory. The context is a narrative of divine empowerment and deliverance, where the naming of the location solidifies the event's memory within Israel's history.
Etymology
The name is a compound of two Hebrew words: 'רָמָה' (rāmâ, H7413), meaning 'height' or 'high place,' and 'לְחִי' (lechîy, H3895), meaning 'jaw' or 'jawbone.' It is a descriptive toponym formed directly from the object (the jawbone) used as a weapon in the event that occurred there. The construction follows a common Hebrew pattern for place names that record historical incidents.
Semantic Range
The naming of Ramath-Lechi highlights God's use of unconventional means to achieve deliverance for His people. It underscores themes of divine strength working through human weakness, as God empowered Samson with a humble, improvised weapon. Understanding this Hebrew name enriches reading by connecting the geography directly to the theology of God's surprising provision and memorializing His acts in history.
In ancient Near Eastern culture, naming a location after a significant event was a common practice to commemorate and preserve memory. A jawbone was an ignoble tool of war, making the name both memorable and ironic, contrasting the Philistines' military might with God's power through an ordinary object. This differs from modern place-naming, which is often administrative or descriptive without such narrative immediacy.
No direct synonyms as a unique place name. Related toponyms include: Ramah (רָמָה, H7414) — a common term for 'height' used in many other place names (e.g., Ramah of Benjamin).
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.
Full methodology & sources →