Migdol
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mktr[1] in hieroglyphs | |||||||
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Era: Middle Kingdom (2055–1650 BC) | |||||||
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mꜥgꜣdjr[2] in hieroglyphs | |||||
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Migdol, or migdal, is a Hebrew word (מגדּלה מגדּל, מגדּל מגדּול) which means either a tower (from its size or height), an elevated stage (a rostrum or pulpit), or a raised bed (within a river). Physically, it can mean fortified land, i.e. a walled city or castle; or elevated land, as in a raised bed, like a platform, possibly a lookout.
Migdol is a known loanword from Egyptian (mktr), mekter,[1] or mgatir[2] meaning "fort", "fortification", or "stronghold". The corresponding term in Coptic is ⲙⲉϣⲧⲱⲗ meštôl. Figuratively, "tower" has connotations of proud authority.
In archaeology, migdol is a specific type of temple, examples of which have been discovered for instance at Hazor, Megiddo, Tel Haror, Pella and Shechem.
Places named Migdol or Migdal in the Hebrew Bible
The
Joshua referred to Migdal-Gad, 'tower of Gad', one of the fortified cities of Judah, and also to Migdal-El, 'tower of God', one of the fortified towns of Naphtali (Joshua 19.38).
The letters of Šuta refer to a "Magdalu in Egypt" which Albright identified with Jeremiah's Migdol.[13]
Places in modern Israel named Migdal
Migdal is a town in the northern district of Israel, 8 km north of Tiberias.
Migdal Ha'emek is a city in modern-day Israel, situated on a large hill surrounded by the Kishon river, west of Nazareth.
References
- ^ a b M. Vygus. Middle Egyptian dictionary, p. 627
- ^ a b E. A. Wallis Budge (1920). An Egyptian hieroglyphic dictionary: with an index of English words, king list and geological list with indexes, list of hieroglyphic characters, coptic and semitic alphabets, etc. Vol I. John Murray. p. 290.
- ^ Falk, D. A. (2018). "What We Know about the Egyptian Places Mentioned in Exodus". TheTorah.com.
- ^ The site is referred to as, e.g., “Migdol of Seti-Merneptah (Seti I).” Gardiner, LEM, 67.
- ^ The map is located in the Hypostyle Hall at Karnak Temple.
- ^ It was excavated by James Hoffmeier from 1998-2007; James K. Hoffmeier, Excavations in North Sinai: Tell el-Borg I (Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns, 2014), 1-33.
- ^ James K. Hoffmeier and Stephen O. Moshier, “The Ways of Horus,” Excavations in North Sinai: Tell el-Borg I. ed. James K. Hoffmeier (Winona Lake, IA: Eisenbrauns, 2014), 44.
- ISBN 978-2-84050-521-1.
- ISSN 0007-6260.
- ISSN 0003-097X.
- ISSN 0003-097X.
- ^ Hoffmeier, James K. (2018–2019). "The Curious Phenomenon of Moving Military Sites on Egypt's Eastern Frontier". Journal of the Society for the Study of Egyptian Antiquities. 45: 105‒134.
- ^ The future of biblical archaeology: reassessing methodologies and ... - Page 105 James Karl Hoffmeier, Alan Ralph Millard - 2004 "What is important for us is the identification of the Migdol referred to here and the meaning of the phrase "Akka is like Magdalu in Egypt." Albright, who was certain that the Migdol here is the Migdol of the Bible, translates that ..."