the name of one of the four rivers the source of which was in paradise, Gen 2:13. (See Eden.) Reland, Calmet, &c, think that Gihon is the Araxes, which has its source, as well as the Tigris and Euphrates, in the mountains of Armenia, and, running with almost incredible rapidity, falls into the Caspian Sea. Gihon was also the name of a fountain to the west of Jerusalem, at which Solomon was anointed king by the high priest Zadok, and the Prophet Nathan, 1Ki 1:33.
Gihon, 1
1. Gi´hon, a fountain near Jerusalem. The place outside the city to which the young Solomon was taken to be anointed king, was called Gihon, but its direction is not indicated (1Ki 1:33; 1Ki 1:38). Subsequently king Hezekiah ’stopped the upper water-course [or upper out-flow of the waters] of Gihon, and brought it straight down to the west side of the city of David’ (2Ch 32:30; 2Ch 33:14). This was, perhaps, on occasion of the approach of the Assyrian army under Sennacherib, when, to prevent the besiegers from finding water, great numbers of the people labored with much diligence in stopping the water of the fountains without the city, and in particular of ’the brook that ran through the midst of the land’ (2Ch 32:3-4). The author of the book of Sirach (Sir 48:17) also states, that ’Hezekiah brought water into the midst of the city; he dug with iron into the rock, and built fountains for the waters.’ The fountain of Gihon is also mentioned by Josephus. From a comparison of these passages the editor of the Pictorial Bible (on 2 Chronicles 32) arrived at the conclusion, since confirmed by Dr. Robinson, that there existed anciently a fountain of Gihon, on the west side of the city, which was ’stopped’ or covered over by Hezekiah, and its waters brought by subterraneous channels into the city. Before that time it would naturally have flowed down through the valley of Gihon, and probably formed the brook which was stopped at the same time. ’The fountain may have been stopped, and its waters thus secured very easily by digging deep and erecting over it one or more vaulted subterranean chambers.’
Gihon, 2
Gihon; The name of one of the rivers of Paradise [PARADISE].
1. One of the four rivers of Paradise; as some suppose, the Araxes, Gen 2:13 . See EDEN, and EUPHRATES.\par 2. A fountain near Jerusalem on the west, besides which Solomon was anointed king, 1Ki 1:33,38 . Hezekiah covered it over, and brought its waters by a subterranean channel into the city, 2Ch 32:3,30 33:14. A pool still exists in the spot referred to, three hundred feet long, two hundred wide, and twenty deep, with steps at two corners; and recently, in digging to lay the foundations of the Anglican church, an immense conduit was discovered running east and west, thirty feet under ground built of stone and coated with cement, and partly cut out of solid rock. Probably this was connected with the fountain of Gibon.\par
1. Gen 2:13.
2. A fountain near Jerusalem, where Solomon was anointed king (1Ki 1:33; 1Ki 1:38; 1Ki 1:45). The "down" in going and "up" in returning show it was below the city. Manasseh built a wall outside the city of David from the W. of Gihon in the valley (
An aqueduct discovered lately (1872) runs from near the Damascus gate, on the Bezetha hill, to the souterrain at the convent of the Sisters of Zion. It probably brought the water from the pool N. of the tombs of the kings (probably the "upper pool," 2Ki 18:17; Isa 7:3; Isa 36:2, and "upper watercourse of Gihon" stopped by Hezekiah) to the pool of Bethesda. Siloam was the lower Gihon. It is suggested that the city of David was on the eastern hill, so Hezekiah by bringing it W. of the city of David brought it within the city, and so out of the enemy’s reach. Psa 48:2 confirms the view that mount Zion was to the N. of Moriah, the temple hill: "the joy of the whole earth is mount Zion, on the sides of the N. the city of the great Kine."
(Heb. Gichon’,
The second river of Paradise presents difficulties not less insurmountable than the first, or Pison. Those who maintained that the Pison is the Ganges held also that the Gihon was the Nile. One great objection to this theory is, that although in the books of the Old Testament frequent allusion is made to this river, it nowhere appears to have been known to thee Hebrews by the name Gihon. The idea seems to have originated with the Sept. rendering of
Inasmuch as the sacred narrative makes it evident that all the rivers in question took their origin from the head waters of the Euphrates and the Tigris, we must refer the Gihon to one of the streasms of the same region, namely, the lake system of Central Armenia, in the vicinity of Lake Van. As the Euphrates and Tigris flow southerly, so we may naturally conclude that by the Pison and Gihon are intended rivers flowing northerly, probably one towards the Caspian, and the other towards the Eusxine. No better representative of the Gihon can be found in this region: than the Araxes (
2. A fountain near Jerusalem, to which the young Solomon was taken to be anointed kin" (1Ki 1:3; 1Ki 1:38), out of sight, but within hearing of a En- rogel, with the city between (1Ki 1:9; 1Ki 1:41), but its direction is not indicated. Subsequently Hezekiah "stopped the upper water-course [or upper outflow of thee waters] of Gihon, and brought it straight down to the west side of the city of David" (2 Chronicles 22:30). This was, perhaps, on occasion of the approach of the Assyrian army under Sennacherilb, when, to prevent the besiegers from finding water, great numbers of the people labored with much diligence in stopping the water of the fountains without the city, and in particular of "the brook that ran through the midst of the land" (2Ch 32:3-4). The author of the book of Sirach (48:17) also states that "Hezekiah brought water into the midst of the city; he dug with iron into the rock, and built fountains for the waters." The fountain of Gihon is also mentioned lay Josephus as living outside the city (
Gihon (gî’hŏn), fountain, or stream, 1. The name of a river of Eden, Gen 2:13. 2. A place near Jerusalem where Solomon was proclaimed king. 1Ki 1:33-45. Hezekiah stopped the upper water-course of Gihon, and Manasseh built a wall on the west side of Gihon. 2Ch 32:30; 2Ch 33:14
[Gi’hon]
1. One of the rivers in the garden of Eden, now quite unknown. Gen 2:13.
2. Place near Jerusalem where Solomon was anointed and proclaimed king. Hezekiah stopped the upper water-courses of Gihon and brought the water down to the west side of the city of David. Manasseh also built a wall "on the west side of Gihon, in the valley even to the entering in at the fish-gate." 1Ki 1:33; 1Ki 1:38; 1Ki 1:45; 2Ch 32:30; 2Ch 33:14. Some locate Gihon at the Pool of Siloam, others at the Fountain of the Virgin; and some associate the ’lower pool of Gihon’ with the Birket es Sultan at the S.W. of the city.
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By: Emil G. Hirsch, M. Seligsohn
1. The second river of Eden, surrounding the whole land of Cush or Ethiopia (Gen. ii. 13). Its identification has been a matter of dispute among Biblical exegetes and critics. Josephus (" Ant. " i. 1, § 3) identifies Gihon with the Nile, and the Septuagint renders "Sihor" (the Nile; Jer. ii. 18) by
2. A fountain near Jerusalem where the anointing and proclamation of Solomon as king took place (I Kings i. 33, 38, 45). According to one passage it was on low ground (see II Chron. xxxiii. 14), but in another (ib. xxxii. 30) it is said that Hezekiah stopped the "upper watercourse" of Gihon. This fountain is mentioned by Josephus as being outside the city ("Ant." vii. 14, § 5). Robinson ("Researches," i. 513) came to the conclusion that "there existed anciently a fountain Gihon on the west of the city, which was 'stopped' or covered over by Hezekiah, and its waters brought down by subterranean channels into the city." The Jewish commentators consider this Gihon to be the river mentioned above. The Targum of Jonathan, as well as the Syriac and Arabic versions have "Shiloah" for "Gihon" in I Kings i., while in Chronicles they agree with the Hebrew text.
GIHON (from root ‘to burst forth,’ 1Ki 1:33; 1Ki 1:35; 1Ki 1:45, 2Ch 32:30; 2Ch 33:14).—1. A spring near Jerusalem, evidently sacred and therefore selected as the scene of Solomon’s coronation (1Ki 1:32). Hezekiah made an aqueduct from it (2Ch 32:30). Undoubtedly the modern ‘Ain umm ed-deraj or ‘Virgin’s Fount.’ See Siloam. 2. One of the four rivers of Paradise. See Eden [Garden of].
E. W. G. Masterman.
Used figuratively of wisdom in Sirach 24:27, “as Gihon (the King James Version Geon) in the days of vintage.”
