called by the LXX, Gai, by Josephus, Aina, and by others Ajah, a town of Palestine, situate west of Bethel, and at a small distance north-west of Jericho. The three thousand men, first sent by Joshua to reduce this city, were repulsed, on account of the sin of Achan, who had violated the anathema pronounced against Jericho, by appropriating a part of the spoil. After the expiation of this offence, the whole army of Israel marched against Ai, with orders to treat that city as Jericho had been treated, with this difference, that the plunder was to be given to the army. Joshua, having appointed an ambush of thirty thousand men, marched against the city, and by a feigned retreat, drew out the king of Ai with his troops; and upon on a signal given by elevating his shield on the top of a pike, the men in ambush entered the city and set fire to it. Thus the soldiers of Ai, placed between two divisions of Joshua’s army, were all destroyed; the king alone being preserved for a more ignominious death on a gibbet, where he hung till sunset. The spoil of the place was afterward divided among the Israelites. The men appointed for ambush are, in one place, said to be thirty thousand, and in another five thousand. For reconciling this apparent contradiction, most commentators have generally supposed, that there were two bodies placed in ambuscade between Bethel and Ai, one of twenty-five thousand and the other of five thousand men; the latter being probably a detachment from the thirty thousand first sent, and ordered to lie as near to the city as possible. Masius allows only five thousand men for the ambuscade, and twenty-five thousand for the attack.
Ai (Jos 7:2; Gen 12:8; Neh 11:31; Isa 10:28), a royal city of the Canaanites, which lay east of Bethel. It existed in the time of Abraham, who pitched his tent between the two cities (Gen 12:8; Gen 13:3); but it is chiefly noted for its capture and destruction by Joshua (Jos 7:2-5; Jos 8:1-29). At a later period Ai was rebuilt, and is mentioned by Isaiah (Isa 10:28) and also after the Captivity. The site was known, and some scanty ruins still existed in the time of Eusebius and Jerome, but Dr. Robinson was unable to discover any certain traces of either.
Called also Hai, Gen 12:8 ; Aija, Neh 11:31 ; and Aiath, Isa 10:28 . A royal city of the Canaanites, east of Bethel, near which Abraham once sojourned and built an altar, Gen 12:8 ; 13:3. It is memorable for Joshua’s defeat on account of Achan, and his subsequent victory, Jos 7:2-5 ; 8:1-29. It was rebuilt, and is mentioned by Isaiah. Its ruins are spoken of by Eusebius and Jerome, but the exact site cannot now be fixed with certainty.\par
A’i. (heap of ruins).
1. A city lying east of Bethel and "beside Bethaven." Jos 7:2; Jos 8:9. It was the second city taken by Israel after the passage of the Jordan, and was "utterly destroyed." Jos 7:3-5; Jos 8:1; Jos 9:3; Jos 10:1-2; Jos 12:9.
2. A city of the Ammonites, apparently attached to Heshbon. Jer 49:3.
("heap of rains".)
1. AI or HAI, i.e. the Ai (Gen 12:8); a royal city (Jos 7:2; Jos 8:9; Jos 8:23; Jos 8:29; Jos 10:1-2; Jos 12:9); E. of Bethel, "beside Bethaven." The second Canaanite city taken by Israel and "utterly destroyed." The name AIATH still belonged to the locality when Sennacherib marched against Jerusalem (Isa 10:28). "Men of Bethel and Ai," (223 according to Ezr 2:28, but 123 according to Neh 7:32,) returned from Babylon with Zerubbzbel. Ezra’s list was made in Babylon; Nehemiah’s in Judaea long after. Death and change of purpose would make many in Ezra’s list of intending returners not appear in Nehemiah’s list of those actually arriving.
Aija is mentioned among the towns reoccupied by the Benjamites (Neh 11:31). Perhaps the site is at the head of Wary Harith.
2. A city of Ammon, near Heshbon (Jer 49:3).
(Hebrew Ay,
It is the opinion of some that the words AVIM SEE AVIM in Jos 18:23, and GAZA SEE GAZA in 1Ch 7:28, are corruptions of Ai.
2. A city of the Ammonites, apparently opposite Heshbon, and devastated next to it by the Babylonians on their way to Jerusalem (Jer 49:3). Others, however, regard the name as an appellative here.
Ai (â’î, heap of ruins. 1. A city of the Canaanites, Gen 13:3, where it is "Hai" in the Authorized Version, but Ai in the Revised Version. Taken by Joshua. Jos 7:2-5; Jos 8:1-29. Also called Aiath, Isa 10:28, and Aija in the A. V. and R. V., Neh 11:31. Abraham pitched his tent between Hai and Bethel. Gen 12:8. The city of Ai was east of Bethel, and about nine miles north of Jerusalem. It is named 38 times in the Bible. 2. A city of the Ammonites, not far from Heshbon. Jer 49:3.
AI.—1. A place between which and Bethel Abraham was stationed before (Gen 12:8) and after (Gen 13:3) his sojourn in Egypt. The repulse of the Israelite attempt on the city (Jos 7:2-5) led to the exposure of the crime of Achan; when that was expiated, the city was captured and destroyed (Jos 8:1-28) by a ruse. It never reappears in history, though it continued to be inhabited: it is the Aiath in Isaiah’s description of the march of the Assyrian (Jos 10:28), and the Aija of Neh 11:31. In 1Ch 7:28 ‘Azzah, enumerated among the cities of Ephraim, is in many MSS ‘Ayyah, which is another form of the name. This, however, cannot in any case be the same place, which was within the tribe of Benjamin (Jos 18:23, where Avvim is possibly a corruption for the name of this city). After the Exile, Ai and Bethel between them supplied a contingent of 223 to the number that returned (Ezr 2:28), and the city was once more settled by Benjamites (Neh 11:31). That the city was insignificant is definitely stated in Jos 7:3, and indicated by the fact that in the list of captured cities it is almost the only one of which the situation is specified (Jos 12:9). Its capture, however, made a deep impression on the Canaanites (Jos 9:3; Jos 10:1). As to its identification, the only indication to guide us is its proximity to Bethel (agreed by all to be Beitin), on the east of that place (as follows from Gen 12:8). Various sites have been proposed—Turmus ‘Aya (which contains an element resembling the name, but the situation is impossible); Khurbet Hayan (which also has a similar name, but the antiquities of the place are not known to be old enough); Deir Diwan (which is in the right place, but also possibly not an old enough site); and et-Tell (a mound whose name has the same meaning as the word Ai [‘heap’]. Possibly this last is the most likely site.
2. A wholly distinct place, mentioned in a prophecy against the Ammonites, Jer 49:3 (perh. a clerical error for Ar).
R. A. S. Macalister.
(1) A town of central Palestine, in the tribe of Benjamin, near and just east of Bethel (Gen 12:8). It is identified with the modern Haiyan, just south of the village
(2) The Ai of Jer 49:3 is an Ammonite town, the text probably being a corruption of
