Metheg-ammah

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Metheg-ammah (Hebrew: מֶ֥תֶג הָאַמָּ֖ה Meṯeḡ hā’Ammāh) is a biblical word or phrase that has caused some difficulty for biblical scholars and translators. The phrase is used once only, at 2 Samuel 8:1.

The whole of 2 Samuel 8:1–13 lists David's conquests after he became king of the United Monarchy and therefore in some translations of the Bible it is treated as a location which he is said to have captured from the Philistines.[1]

An alternate understanding is that this is not a proper name but a

ASV, and NASB. The Pulpit Commentary argues that "Metheg-ammah" means "the bridle of the mother city". We learn from the parallel place (1 Chronicles 18:1) that the city of Gath is meant by this phrase. Gath was at this time the metropolis of Philistia, and had reduced the other four chief towns to a state of vassalage. Thus by taking Gath, his old city of refuge (1 Samuel 27:2), David acquired also the supremacy which he had previously exercised over the whole country".[3]

Some other translations (e.g.

NABRE
) leave the word untranslated; for example, the NABRE version has the text as:

After this, David defeated the Philistines and subdued them; and David took … from the Philistines.[4]

and states that "the original Hebrew seems irretrievable".[5]

References

  1. , and JPS (1917)
  2. ^ Thomas Kelly Cheyne (1901) [1899]. "Metheg-ammah". In T. K. Cheyne; J. Sutherland Black (eds.). Encyclopaedia Biblica: A Critical Dictionary of the Literary, Political, and Religious History, the Archaeology, Geography, and Natural History of the Bible. Vol. 3, L–P. New York: The Macmillan Company.
  3. ^ Pulpit Commentary on 2 Samuel 8, accessed 16 July 2017
  4. ^ 2 Samuel 8:1
  5. ^ Footnote a at 2 Samuel 8:1