Easton's Bible Dictionary

(Kiana) #1

  • ARPAD (Isaiah 10:9; 36:19; 37:13), also Arphad, support, a Syrian city
    near Hamath, along with which it is invariably mentioned (2 Kings 19:13;
    18:34; Isaiah 10:9), and Damascus (Jeremiah 49:23). After a siege of three
    years it fell (B.C. 742) before the Assyrian king Tiglath-pileser II. Now
    Tell Erfud.

  • ARPHAXAD son of Shem, born the year after the Deluge. He died at the
    age of 438 years (Genesis 11:10-13; 1 Chronicles 1:17, 18; Luke 3:36). He
    dwelt in Mesopotamia, and became, according to the Jewish historian
    Josephus, the progenitor of the Chaldeans. The tendency is to recognize in
    the word the name of the country nearest the ancient domain of the
    Chaldeans. Some regard the word as an Egypticized form of the territorial
    name of Ur Kasdim, or Ur of the Chaldees.

  • ARROWS At first made of reeds, and then of wood tipped with iron.
    Arrows are sometimes figuratively put for lightning (Deuteronomy 32:23,
    42; Psalm 7:13; 18:14; 144:6; Zechariah 9:14). They were used in war as
    well as in the chase (Genesis 27:3; 49:23). They were also used in
    divination (Ezekiel 21:21).


The word is frequently employed as a symbol of calamity or disease
inflicted by God (Job 6:4; 34:6; Psalm 38:2; Deuteronomy 32:23. Comp.
Ezekiel 5:16), or of some sudden danger (Psalm 91:5), or bitter words
(Psalm 64:3), or false testimony (Proverbs 25:18).



  • ARTAXERXES the Greek form of the name of several Persian kings. (1.)
    The king who obstructed the rebuilding of the temple (Ezra 4:7). He was
    probably the Smerdis of profane history.


(2.) The king mentioned in Ezra 7:1, in the seventh year (B.C. 458) of
whose reign Ezra led a second colony of Jews back to Jerusalem, was
probably Longimanus, who reigned for forty years (B.C. 464-425); the
grandson of Darius, who, fourteen years later, permitted Nehemiah to
return and rebuild Jerusalem.

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