BABEL, TOWER OF
- Easton's
- Torrey's
| EASTON'S BIBLE DICTIONARY |
the name given to the tower which the primitive fathers of our
race built in the land of Shinar after the Deluge (Genesis
11:1-9). Their object in building this tower was probably that it might
be seen as a rallying-point in the extensive plain of Shinar, to which they had
emigrated from the uplands of Armenia, and so prevent their being scattered
abroad. But God interposed and defeated their design by condounding their
language, and hence the name Babel, meaning "confusion." In the Babylonian
tablets there is an account of this event, and also of the creation and the
deluge. (See CHALDEA.)
The Temple of Belus, which is supposed to occupy its site, is described by the
Greek historian Herodotus as a temple of great extent and magnificence, erected
by the Babylonians for their god Belus. The treasures Nebuchadnezzar brought
from Jerusalem were laid up in this temple (2 Chronicles
36:7
).
The Birs Nimrud, at ancient Borsippa, about 7 miles south-west of Hillah, the
modern town which occupies a part of the site of ancient Babylon, and 6 miles
from the Euphrates, is an immense mass of broken and fire-blasted fragments, of
about 2,300 feet in circumference, rising suddenly to the height of 235 feet
above the desert-plain, and is with probability regarded as the ruins of the
tower of Babel. This is "one of the most imposing ruins in the country." Others
think it to be the ruins of the Temple of Belus.
| TORREY'S "THE NEW TOPICAL TEXTBOOK" (additional material included) |
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