A mountainous region of ancient Palestine east of the Jordan River in what is now northwest Jordan.
Dictionary:
Gil·e·ad (gĭl'ē-əd) ![]() |
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| Bible Guide: Gilead |
1. The central part of the territory east of the Jordan, which consisted of three regions: the plain, Gilead and Bashan (Deut 3:10). Gilead extends from the Sea of Galilee in the north to the Dead Sea in the south. The name probably derives from Galeed "heap of testimony" (Gen 31:47). After the Israelite conquest it was divided between the tribes of Reuben and Gad and half of the tribe of Manasseh (Deut 3:12-13). The name Gilead is sometimes applied to certain portions of this region (cf Deut 3:15-16; I Kgs 4:19), which was rich in pasture and was therefore a place for cattle-raising (Num 32:1, etc.). It was also famous for its balm (Jer 8:22).
Archeological surveys have shown that the area was settled as early as the 24th-23rd centuries B.C. After a long period of abandonment it was resettled in the 13th century B.C. at the time when the kingdoms of Edom and Moab were founded in its southern part. Most of Gilead, however, was occupied by the kings of the Amorites and later conquered by the Israelite tribes (Num 32: 1 ff, etc). Jephtath the Gileadite fought Ammon in Gilead (Judge chap. 11). Later Saul defeated the Ammonites who attempted to take Jabesh Gilead (I Sam chap. 11). After the division of the kingdom Gilead was in Israel, but its northern part was soon conquered by the Arameans and another part was taken by the Ammonites (Amos 1:13). In 814 B.C. Hazael captured the whole of Gilead (II Kgs 10:32-3), but when Damascus was assailed by the Assyrians it returned to Israel (II Kgs 13:25). In 732 B.C. the country was conquered by Tiglath-Pileser III and many of its inhabitants were deported to Assyria (II Kgs 15:29). The southern part of Giliead was then in the hands of the Ammonites (Josh 13:24-25; Jer 49:1), while in the northern part an Assyrian satrapy by the name of Galaza was formed. After the return from the Babylonian Exile Gilead was outside Jewish territory.
During the early Hellenistic period it was a separate district under the name of Galaaditis. Later in the same period, under the Seleucids, Jews settled in a few towns in the district. Some of these were conquered a little later by Judas Maccabee (I Macc 5:17-45). In two campaigns early in his reign Alexander Jannaeus conquered the whole of Gilead. When the country was conquered by the Roman general Pompey (in 63 B.C.) the whole region was divided into fairly small units and distributed among the larger cities some of which were members of the Decapolis. During the reign of Herod and his successors Galaaditis remained outside their kingdoms. After A.D. 106 it was part of the Provincia Arabia.
2. Son of Machir, grandson of Manasseh; he gave his name to the territory of Gilead.
3. Father of Jephthah.
4. A Gadite, son of Michael and father of Jaroah. The family lived in Gilead No.1.
Concordance
GILEAD 1:
Gen 31:21, 23,25; 37:25. Num 26:29; 32:1,26, 29, 39-40. Deut 2:36; 3:10, 12-13,15-16; 4:43; 34:1. Josh 12:2, 5; 13:11,25, 31; 17:1,5-6; 20:8; 21:38; 22:9,13, 15, 32. Judg 7:3; 10:4,8, 17-18; 11:5,7-11, 29; 12:4-5,7; 20:1. I Sam 13:7. II Sam 2:9; 17:26; 24:6. I Kgs 4:13, 19; 17:1; 22:3-4, 6, 12,15, 20, 29. II Kgs 8:28; 9:1, 4, 14; 10:33; 15:25,29. I Chr 2:22; 5:9-10, 16; 6:80; 26:31; 27:21. II Chr 18:2-3, 5, 11,14, 19, 28; 22:5. Ps 60:7; 108:8. Song 4:1; 6:5. Jer 8:22; 22:6; 46:11; 50:19. Ezek 47:18. Hos 6:8; 12:11. Amos 1:3, 13. Obadv. 19. Mic 7:14. Zech 10:10
GILEAD 2:
Num 26:29-30; 27:1; 36:1. Josh 17:1, 3. Judg 5:17. I Chr 2:21, 23; 7:14-15, 17
GILEAD 3:
Judg 11:1-2
GILEAD 4:
I Chr 5:14
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Gilead |
| Wikipedia: Gilead |
From the Scriptures, "Gilead" means hill of testimony or mound of witness, (Genesis 31:21), a mountainous region east of the Jordan River, situated in the present-day Kingdom of Jordan. It is also referred to by the Aramaic name Yegar-Sahadutha, which carries the same meaning as the Hebrew (Gen. 31:47). From its mountainous character it is called "the mount of Gilead" (Gen. 31:25). It is called also "the land of Gilead" (Num. 32:1), and sometimes simply "Gilead" (Ps. 60:7; Gen. 37:25). As a whole, it included the tribal territories of Gad, Reuben, and the eastern half of Manasseh (Deut. 3:13; Num. 32:40). It was bounded on the north by Bashan, and on the south by Moab and Ammon (Gen. 31:21; Deut. 3:12-17). "Half Gilead" was possessed by Sihon, and the other half, separated from it by the river Jabbok, by Og, king of Bashan. The deep ravine of the river Hieromax (the modern Sheriat el-Mandhur) separated Bashan from Gilead, which was about 60 miles in length and 20 in breadth, extending from near the south end of the Lake of Gennesaret to the north end of the Dead Sea. Abarim, Pisgah, Nebo, and Peor are its mountains mentioned in Scripture.
In the Bible, Gilead or Galaad (Hebrew: גִּלְעָד, "Heap/mass of testimony/witness", Standard Hebrew Gilʻad, Tiberian Hebrew Gilʻāḏ; Latin: Galaad) is the name of three persons and two geographic places. Gilead is divided among the tribes of Gad and Mannaseh.
Specifically, it may refer to:
The Old Testament (or Hebrew Bible) repeatedly mentions a mythological or real "balm in Gilead" or "balm of Gilead," references and symbolism which have appeared repeatedly in Western culture, see Balsam of Mecca.
"
In Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Raven," the speaker asks the spectral bird: "Is there balm in Gilead? Tell me truly I implore."
Balm in Gilead, American dramatist Lanford Wilson's first full-length play, centers on a cafe frequented by heroin addicts, prostitutes, and thieves.
In the novel The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood, the United States has been replaced by a theocratic totalitarian nation, the "Republic of Gilead."
In Stephen King's Dark Tower novels, the protagonist, Roland Deschain, hails from a kingdom called Gilead, which was destroyed by agents of the Crimson King.
In Christopher Paolini's Inheritance Cycle, Gil'ead is a location through which Eragon travels.
Gilead is also the title of the 2004 award-winning novel (2005 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Critics Circle Award) by American writer Marilynne Robinson.
The 1996 film The Spitfire Grill, a story of a young woman's transformation of a community and redemption of her own and her fellow townpersons' past, is set in the small town of Gilead, Maine. The 2001 musical of the same name set Gilead in Wisconsin, perhaps due to its premiere in Milwaukee.
The song “Balsam in Gilead”, based on Jeremiah 8:22[1], is included in Jehovah's Witnesses' 1984 hymnbook "Sing Praises to Jehovah". The lyrics mention God's provisions for comforting, and also encourage being a comfort to others.
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| What is the meaning of the word gilead? |
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