Easton's Bible Dictionary

(Kiana) #1

Babylonish Captivity would be the means of purging out the idolatrous
alloy that had corrupted the people.



  • TINKLING ORNAMENTS (Isaiah 3:18), anklets of silver or gold, etc.,
    such as are still used by women in Syria and the East.

  • TIPHSAH passing over; ford, one of the boundaries of Solomon’s
    dominions (1 Kings 4:24), probably “Thapsacus, a great and wealthy town
    on the western bank of the Euphrates,” about 100 miles north-east of
    Tadmor. All the land traffic between the east and the west passed through
    it. Menahem undertook an expedition against this city, and “smote
    Tiphsah and all that were therein” (2 Kings 15:16). This expedition
    implied a march of some 300 miles from Tirzah if by way of Tadmor, and
    about 400 if by way of Aleppo; and its success showed the strength of the
    Israelite kingdom, for it was practically a defiance to Assyria. Conder,
    however, identifies this place with Khurbet Tafsah, some 6 miles west of
    Shechem.

  • TIRAS the youngest of the sons of Japheth (Genesis 10:2; 1 Chronicles
    1:5).

  • TIRES “To tire” the head is to adorn it (2 Kings 9:30). As a noun the
    word is derived from “tiara,” and is the rendering of the Hebrews p’er, a
    “turban” or an ornament for the head (Ezekiel 24:17; R.V., “headtire;”
    24:23). In Isaiah 3:18 the word saharonim is rendered “round tires like the
    moon,” and in Judges 8:21, 26 “ornaments,” but in both cases “crescents”
    in the Revised Version.

  • TIRHAKAH the last king of Egypt of the Ethiopian (the fifteenth)
    dynasty. He was the brother-in-law of So (q.v.). He probably ascended the
    throne about B.C. 692, having been previously king of Ethiopia (2 Kings
    19:9; Isaiah 37:9), which with Egypt now formed one nation. He was a
    great warrior, and but little is known of him. The Assyrian armies under
    Esarhaddon, and again under Assur-bani-pal, invaded Egypt and defeated
    Tirhakah, who afterwards retired into Ethiopia, where he died, after
    reigning twenty-six years.

  • TIRSHATHA a word probably of Persian origin, meaning “severity,”
    denoting a high civil dignity. The Persian governor of Judea is so called
    (Ezra 2:63; Nehemiah 7:65, 70). Nehemiah is called by this name in

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