Girgashite
Girgashite
(Hebrew invariably in the sing. and. with the art. hag-Gisgashi’, , in a collective sense; dwelling in a clayay soil; Sept. and , Vulg. CaGerescei and Geryesceus; A.V. “Girgashite” in 1Ch 1:14; “Girgasite” in Gen 10:16; elsewhere ” Girgashites”), a designation of one of the nations who were in possession of Canaan before the entrance thither of the children of Israel. In Gen 10:16, they are mentioned as the descendants of the fifth son of Canaan; in other passages the tribe is merely referred to, and that but occasionally, in time formula expressing the doomed country (Genesis 15:22; Deu 7:1 [and 20:17 in Saniarit. and Sept.]; Jos 3:10; Jos 24:11; 1Ch 1:14; Neh 9:8). Thee Girgashites are conjectured to have been a part of the large family of the Hivites, as them are omitted in nine out of ten places in which the nations or families of Canaan are mentioned, while in the tenth they are’ mentioned, and the Hivites omitted. Josephus states; that nothing but the name of the Girgashites () remained in his time (Ant. 1:6, 2). In the Jewish commentaries of R. Nachman and elsewhere, the Girgashites are described as having retired into Africa, fearing the power of God; and Procopius, in bin History of the Vandals, mentions an ancient but doubtful inscription in Mauritania Tingitana, stating that the inhabitants had fled thither from the face of Joshua, the son of Nun. A city Girgis ) existed among the Phoenician tribes in Northern Africa at the Syrtis Minor (Farst, Heb. Lex. page 298). The notion that the Girgashites did migrate seems to have been founded on the circumt-ansce that, although they are included in the list of the seven devoted nationas either to be driven out or destroyed by the Israelites (Gen 15:20-21; Deu 7:1; Jos 3:10; Jos 24:11; Neh 9:8), yet they are omitted in the list of those to be utterly destroyed (Deu 20:17), and are mentioned among those with whom, contrary to the divine decree, the Israelites lived and intermarried (Jdg 3:1-6). SEE CANAAN.
The expression in Jos 24:11 would seem to indicate that the district of the Girgashites was on the west of Jordan. By most writers, however, they are supposed to have been settled in that part of the country which lay to the east of the lake of Gennesareth (Jour. Sac. Lit. October 1851, page 167). This conclusion is founded on the identity between the word , which the Septuagint gives for Girgashites, and that by which Matthew (8:28) indicates the land of the Gergesenes (). But as this last reading rests on a conjecture of Origen, on which little reliance is now placed, the conclusion drawn from it has no great weight, although the fact is possible on other grounds, especially the probability that some actual city of this name must have been the foundation of the reading in question. Indeed, the older reading, 6 Gerasenes,” has sufficient resemblance to direct the attention to the country beyond the Jordan; where Eusebius also (Onom. s.v. ) affirms that the Girgashites dwelt. SEE GERASA.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Girgashite
dwelling in clayey soil, the descendants of the fifth son of Canaan (Gen. 10:16), one of the original tribes inhabiting the land of Canaan before the time of the Israelites (Gen. 15:21; Deut. 7:1). They were a branch of the great family of the Hivites. Of their geographical position nothing is certainly known. Probably they lived somewhere in the central part of Western Palestine.
Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary
Girgashite
gurga-sht (, girgash; , Gergesaos; also punctuated (?) Girgasite (Gen 10:16 the King James Version)): A son of (the land of) Canaan (Gen 10:16), and accordingly enumerated along with the Canaanite’ in the list of tribes or nationalities inhabiting that country (Gen 15:21; Deu 7:1; Jos 3:10; Jos 24:11; Neh 9:8). It has been supposed that the name survived in that of the Gergesenes, the King James Version (the Revised Version (British and American) the Gadarenes), of Mat 8:28, on the East side of the Sea of Galilee; Josephus (Ant., I, vi, 2), however, states that nothing was known about it. The inscriptions of the Egyptian king, Ramses II, mention the Qarqish who sent help to the Hittites in their war with Egypt; but Qarqish was more probably in Asia Minor than in Syria. Pinches (The Old Testament in the Light of the Historical Records, 324) would identify the Girgashites with the Kirkishati of an Assyrian tablet; the latter people, however, seem to have lived to the East of the Tigris, and it may be that, as in the case of the Hittites, a colony of the Qarqish, from Asia Minor, was established in Palestine.