The geological structure of Judea is highly favorable to the formation of caves; and the whole region abounds with subterranean caverns of various dimensions, often giving rise to small rivulets. These were used as dwellings, places of refuge, and tombs. It was in a cave that Lot resided after the destruction of Sodom, Gen 19:30 . Petra, in Idumea, was a city of caves, Num 24:21 Son 2:14 Jer 49:16 Job 1:3 . In the vicinity of Hebron, the poor still live in caves while pasturing their flocks. Natural cavities were sometimes enlarged, and artificial ones made for refuge and defense, Jdg 6:2 1Sa 13:6 Isa 2:19 Jer 41:9 . The caves of Machpelah, of Adullam, of Engedi, of Carmel and of Arbela, still exist. See SEPULCHRE.\par
Cave. The most remarkable caves noticed in Scripture are, that in which Lot dwelt after the destruction of Sodom, Gen 19:30; the cave of Machpelah, Gen 23:17; cave of Makkedah, Jos 10:10; cave of Adullam, 1Sa 22:1; cave of Engedi, 1Sa 24:3; Obadiah’s cave, 1Ki 18:4; Elijah’s cave in Horeb, 1Ki 19:9; and, the rock sepulchres of Lazarus and of our Lord. Mat 27:60; Joh 11:38. Caves were used for temporary dwelling-places and for tombs.
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This cavern is shown to the present day. Modern travels abound with descriptions of the caves of Syria. The Crusade writers record the local traditions respecting them current in their times (William of Tyre; Quaresmius, Elucid. Ter. Sane.). Tavernier (Voyage de Perse, part 2, chap. 4) speaks of a grotto between Aleppo and Bir which would hold near 3000 horse. Maundrell has described a large cavern under a high rocky mountain, in the vicinity of Sidon, containing 200 smaller caverns (Travels, p. 158,159). Shaw mentions the numerous dens, holes, and caves in the mountains on the sea-coast, extending through a long range on each side of Joppa. An innumerable multitude of excavations are found in the rocks and valleys round Wady Musa, which were probably formed at first as sepulchres, but afterwards inhabited, like the tombs of Thebes (Robinson’s Researches, 2:529). Other excavations occur at Deir Dubbân (2:353); others in the Wady leading to Santa Hanneh (2:395). " In the mountains of Kul’at Ibn Ma’an, the natural caverns have been united by passages cut in the rocks, in order to render them more commodious habitations. In the midst of these caverns several cisterns have been built; the whole would afford refuge for 600 men" (Burckhardt’s Travels, p. 331). Almost all the habitations at Om-keis (Gadara) are caves (Burckhardt, p. 273). An extensive system of caves exists between Bethlehem and Hebron (Irby and Mangles, p. 103).
2. Scriptural Notices. —
(1.) The first mention of a cave in Scripture relates to that into which Lot and his two daughters retired from Zoar, after the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen 19:30). It was some cavern in the mountains of Moab, but tradition has not fixed upon any of the numerous hollows in that region. SEE ZOAR.
(2.) The next is the cave of Machpelah, in the field of Ephron, which Abraham purchased of the sons of Heth (Gen 25:9-10). There Abraham buried Sarah, and was himself afterwards buried; there also Isaac, Rebekah, Leah, and Jacob were buried (Gen 49:31; Genesis 1, 13). The cave of Machpelah is said to be under the Mohammedan mosque at Hebron, surrounded by a high wall called the Haram; but even the Moslems are not allowed to descend into the cavern (Benj. of Tudela, Early Trav. p. 86; Stanley, p. 149). The tradition that this is the burial-place of the patriarchs is supported by an immense array of evidence (Robinson, Researches, 2:433-440). SEE MACHPELAH.
(3.) The situation of the cave at Makkedah, into which the five kings of the Amorites retired upon their defeat by Joshua, and into which their carcasses were ultimately cast, is not known (Jos 10:16; Jos 10:27). It is thought by many that the cave of Makkedah can hardly be the one to which tradition has assigned the name (Irby and Mangles, p. 93); for, though it is not necessary to suppose that the cave was close to the town of Makkedah, yet the situation of the great caverns both at Beit Jibrin and at Deir Dubban in neither case agrees with that of Makkedah as given by Eusebius, eight miles from Eleutheropolis (Reland, p. 885; Robinson, 2:352, 397; Stanley, p. 211). SEE MAKKEDAH.
(4.) The cave of Adullam, to which David retired to avoid the persecutions of Saul (1Sa 22:1-2). This, according to tradition, is an immense natural cavern at the Wady Khureitun, which passes below the Frank mountain. The site assigned by Eusebius to Adullanm, 10 m. E. of Eleutheropolis, agrees little with that of this cave, which in some respects agrees with the Scripture narrative better than the neighborhood of Deir Dubban, assigned to it by Mr. Stanley (see 1Sa 20:6, and particularly 22:3, 4; Josephus, Ant. 6:12, 3; Reland, p. 549; Irby and Mangles, p. 103; Robinson, 2:175; Stanley, p. 259). SEE ADULLAM.
(5.) The cave at Engedi, which afforded a retreat to David and his followers (1Sa 23:29; 1Sa 24:1), and in which he cut off the skirt of Saul’s robe (1Sa 24:4), can be clearly identified. The place is now called ’Ain Jidy by the Arabs, which means the same as the Hebrew, namely, "The Fountain of the Kid." "On all sides the country is full of caverns, which might serve as lurking-places for David and his men, as they do for outlaws at the present day. The whole scene is drawn to the life" (Robinson, 2:203; comp. Lynch, Narrative, p. 234; Stanley, p. 296). SEE EN-GEDI.
(6.) The cave in which Obadiah concealed the prophets (1Ki 18:4) cannot now be identified, but it was probably in the northern part of the country, in which abundant instances of caves fit for such a purpose might be pointed out. SEE OBADIAH.
(7.) The site of the cave of Elijah (1Ki 19:9), as well as that of the "cleft" of Moses on Mount Horeb (Exo 33:22), is also obviously indeterminate; for, though tradition has not only assigned a place for the former on Jebel Mûsa, and consecrated the spot by a chapel, there are caves on the competing summit of Serbal to one or another of which it might with equal probability be transferred (Stanley, p. 49; Robinson, 1:153; Burckhardt, p. 608). SEE HOREB. The cave of Elijah is pretended to be shown at the foot of Mount Sinai, in a chapel dedicated to him; and a hole near the altar is pointed out as the place where he lay (Robinson, 1:152). See also CARMEL.
(8.) In the New Test. are mentioned the rock sepulchres of Lazarus (Joh 11:38) and Christ (Mat 27:60); the former still shown with little probability by the monks at Bethany (see Robinson, 2:100), and the latter a disputed question. SEE CALVARY.
Besides these special caves there is frequent mention in O.T. of caves as places of refuge. Thus the Israelites are said to have taken refuge from the Philistines in "holes" (1Sa 14:11), to which the name of the scene of Jonathan’s conflict, Mukhmâs (Michmash), sufficiently answers (Stanley, p. 204; Robinson, 2:112; Irby, p. 89). So, also, in the time of Gideon, they had taken refuge from the Midianites in dens, and caves, and strongholds, such as abound in the mountain region of Manasseh (Jdg 6:2; see Stanley, p. 341).
3. Uses of Caves. —
(1.) Caves were used as dwelling places by the early inhabitants of Syria. The Horites, the ancient inhabitants of Idumaea Proper, were troglodytes, or dwellers in caves, as their name imports. Jerome records that in his time Idumsea, or the whole southern region from Eleutheropolis to Petra and Ailah, was full of habitations in caves, the inhabitants using subterranean dwellings on account of the great heat (Comm. on Obadiah 5:6). "The excavations at Deir Dubban and on the south side of the wady, leading to Santa Hanneh, are probably the dwellings of the ancient Horites" (Robinson, 2:353), and they are peculiarly numerous around Beit Jibrin (Eleutheropolis) (2:425). The Scriptures abound with references to habitations in rocks; among others, see Num 24:21; Son 2:14; Jer 49:16; Oba 1:3. Even at the present time many persons live in caves. The inhabitants of Anab, a town on the east of the Jordan, all live in grottoes or caves hollowed out of the rock (Buckingham’s Travels among the Arab Tribes, p. 61). In the neighborhood of Hebron peasants still live in caves, and especially during summer, to be near their flocks (Wilkinson’s Travels, 1:313). Poor families live in caverns in the rocks which seem formerly to have been inhabited as a sort of village, near the ruins of El Burj; so also at Siloam, and in the neighborhood of Nazareth. For the rock-dwellings and temples of Idummea, SEE PETRA.
(2.) Caves afforded excellent refuge in the time of war. Thus the Israelites (1Sa 13:6) are said to have hid themselves in caves, and in thickets, and in rocks, and in high places, and in pits (see also Jer 41:9; Josephus, Ant. 12:11, 1). Hence, then, to "enter into the rock, to go into the holes of the rocks, and into the caves of the earth" (Isa 2:19), would, to the Israelites, be a very proper and familiar way to express terror and consternation. Such were most of the caves noticed above, especially the strongholds of Adullam and Engedi.
(3.) Not only have the caves of Palestine afforded refuge from enemies, but during the earthquakes also, by which the country has been so often visited, the inhabitants have found in them a safe retreat. This was the case in the great convulsion of 1837, when Safet was destroyed; and to this mode of retreat the prophet Isaiah perhaps alludes (Isa 2:10; Isa 2:19; Isa 2:21; see Robinson; 3:321; Stanley, p. 151).
(4.) Caverns were also frequently fortified when occupied by soldiers. Thus Bacchides, the general of Demetrius, in his expedition against Judaea, encamped at Messaloth, near Arbela, and reduced to submission the occupants of the caves (1Ma 9:2; comp. Josephus, Ant. 12:11, 1). Messaloth is probably
CAVE (
It is, however, in reference to the place of birth and the place of burial of Christ that the chief interest in caves centres here. Justin Martyr (Dial. circa (about) Tryph. lxxviii.), in recounting the story of the birth of Christ, says that it took place in a cave (
Rock-hewn tombs, or caves for burial, were of four distinct kinds: (1) tombs which were cut down into the rock, in the same way in which graves are dug at the present time in European countries; the body was let down into these; (2) tombs cut into the face of the rock, into which the bodies were pushed; (3) tombs, somewhat like the last class, excepting that within, against the wall, there was a kind of step, about two feet high, upon which the body was laid; (4) tombs which were little more than a shelf cut into the rock, just long enough and high enough to hold the body. The first three of these classes varied very much in size; in the case of the first, the top, which was level with the ground, was covered with a stone slab; the others were closed by means of a stone slab which could be pushed aside (Mat 27:60), or else a small door was fixed at the entrance. Tombs were not infrequently furnished with an antechamber, from which one entered into an inner space, the tomb proper, through a low doorway. As a rule, a raised shelf ran round the burial-chamber, and upon this the body was laid; that part on which the head rested was slightly higher.* [Note: Nowack, Heb. Arch. i. 191; Benzinger, Heb. Arch. pp. 225–227; Latham, The Risen Master, pp. 32 ff., 87, 88, and see the two illustrations at the commencement of the work.] See Burial, Tomb.
The data to be gathered from the Gospels are not numerous; see Mat 27:60, Mar 15:46, Luk 23:53, Joh 11:38; Joh 20:1-12.
Literature.—Guthe in ZDPV [Note: DPV Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins.] , ‘Zur Topographie der Grabeskirche in Jerusalem,’ xiv. 35–40; Schick in ZDPV [Note: DPV Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins.] , ‘Neu aufgedeckte Graber,’ xvi. 202–205, where a very interesting plate is given; T. Tobler, Bethlehem in Palatstina, pp. 124–227, S. Gallen, 1849; Badeker, Palestine and Syria3 [Note: designates the particular edition of the work referred] , p. cxi ff., Leipzig, 1898; the references, given above, in PEFSt [Note: EFSt Quarterly Statement of the same.] . See also W. R Smith, RS [Note: S Religion of the Semites.] 197 f., and the ‘Index of Subjects’ in Hasting’s Dictionary of the Bible , Extra Volume.
W. O. E. Oesterley.
CAVE.—The soft limestone hills of Palestine abound in caves, natural and artificial; and these must have attracted attention from a very early period. The aboriginal race of Horites were cave-dwellers, and the excavation at Gezer has revealed remains of a probably analogous race in W. Palestine. Lot (Gen 19:30) and David (1Sa 22:1 etc.) dwelt for a time in caves; and their use as places of hiding and refuge is illustrated by many passages, e.g., Jos 10:16, Jdg 6:2, 1Ki 18:4 etc. Caves were also used, at all periods in the history of Palestine, for sepulture, as in the case of Machpelah (Gen 23:1-20). Probably the most remarkable series of caves yet discovered in Palestine are the great labyrinths tunnelled in the bills round Beit Jibrin; one of these, in Tell Sandahannah, contains sixty chambers, united by doors and passages, and groups containing fourteen or fifteen chambers are quite common in the same hill. Another artificial cave near Beit Jibrin contains a hall 80 ft. high and 400 ft. long; it has now fallen in. Other groups of caves, only less extensive, occur in various parts of Palestine on both sides of the Jordan. Little or nothing is known about the history of these great excavations; no definite information about their origin has yet been yielded by them, so far as they have been scientifically explored.
R. A. S. Macalister.
1Sa 22:1 (c) It is a type of the hiding place of GOD’s people when they are persecuted, oppressed, and distressed. They flee to the "secret place of the Most High."
Psalm 57 (Title). (c) This indicates that when GOD’s people are in the most difficult positions and in distressing situations, they may still sing and express their faith in the living GOD. See Psalm 142 (Title).
Isa 2:19 (a) This is not a figure but will actually take place when the great men of the earth seek to hide from GOD. (See Rev 6:15).
