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On
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on (pain, force, iniquity, abode, light, the
sun, city of the sun, (an) stone, stone pillar)
RELATED: Aven, Heliopolis, Joseph, Moses |
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Easton's Bible Dictionary
light; the sun, ( Genesis 41:45 , 41:50 ), The great
seat of sun-worship, called also Bethshemesh ( Jeremiah 43:13 ) and Aven ( Ezekiel
30:17 ), stood on the east bank of the Nile, a few miles north of Memphis, and
near Cairo, in the north-east. The Vulgate and the LXX. Versions have "Heliopolis"
("city of the sun") instead of On in Genesis and of Aven in Ezekiel. The "city
of destruction" Isaiah speaks of ( Isaiah 19:18 , marg. "of Heres;" Hebrew 'Ir-ha-heres,
which some MSS. read Ir-ha-heres, i.e., "city of the sun") may be the name given
to On, the prophecy being that the time will come when that city which was known
as the "city of the sun-god" shall become the "city of destruction" of the sun-god,
i.e., when idolatry shall cease, and the worship of the true God be established.
In ancient times this city was full of obelisks dedicated to the sun. Of these
only one now remains standing. "Cleopatra's Needle" was one of those which stood
in this city in front of the Temple of Tum, i.e., "the sun." It is now erected
on the Thames Embankment, London.
"It was at On that Joseph wooed and won the dark-skinned Asenath, the daughter
of the high priest of its great temple." This was a noted university town, and
here Moses gained his acquaintance with "all the wisdom of the Egyptians."
Hitchcock's Dictionary of Bible Names
pain; force; iniquity
Smith's Bible Dictionary
(1) (abode or city of the sun), A town of lower Egypt,
called BETH-SHEMESH in ( Jeremiah 43:13 ) On is better known under its Greek name
Heliopolis. It was situated on the east side of the Pelusiac branch of the Nile,
just below the point of the Delta, and about twenty miles northeast of Memphis.
The chief object of worship at Heliopolis was the sun, whose temple, described
by Strabo, is now only represented by the single beautiful obelisk, of red granite
so feet 2 inches high above the pedestal which has stood for more than 4000 years,
having been erected by Usirtesen, the second king of the twelfth dynasty. Heliopolis
was anciently famous for its learning, and Eudoxus and Plato studied under its
priests. The first mention of this place in the Bible is in the history of Joseph,
to whom we read Pharaoh gave "to wife Asenath the daughter of Potipherah priest
of On." ( Genesis 41:45 ) comp. ver, Genesis 41:60 and Genesis 46:20 (On is to
be remembered not only as the home of Joseph, but as the traditional place to
which his far-off namesake took Mary and the babe Jesus in the flight to Egypt.
The two famous obelisks, long called "Cleopatras Needles," one of which now stands
in London and the other in Central Park in New York city, once stood before this
city, and were seen by the children of Israel before the exodus, having been quarried
at Syene on the Nile, erected at On (Heliopolis) by Thothmes III., B.C. 1500,
and inscriptions added by Rameses II. (Sesostris) two hundred years later. They
were taken to Alexandria by Augustus Caesar A.D. 23, from which they were removed
to their present places. --ED.)
(2) The son of Peleth and one of the chiefs of the tribe of Reuben, who took part
with Korah, Dathan and Abiram in their revolt against Moses. ( Numbers 16:1 )
(B.C. 1491.) His name does not again appear in the narrative of the conspiracy,
nor is he alluded to when reference is made to the final catastrophe.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
(1) on ('on; Egyptian An, Ant, Annu, probably pronounced
An only, as this is often all that is written, a "stone" or "stone pillars"):
Later called Hellopolis. The name On occurs only in Genesis 41:45 , 50
; 46:20. It occurs in one other place in the Septuagint (Exodus 1:11), where On
is mentioned with Pithom and Raamses as strong cities which the Israelites built.
Hebrew slaves may have worked upon fortifications here, but certainly did not
build the city. On is possibly referred to as `ir ha-herec, in Isaiah 19:18 (see
IR-HA-HERES). On may also be mentioned by Jeremiah (43:13) under the name Beth-shemesh.
Ezekiel speaks of an Aven ('awen) (Ezekiel 30:17), where it is mentioned with
Pibeseth (Bubastis). Aven in this passage is almost certainly the same as On in
Genesis 41:45; 46:20, as the letters of both words are the same in the Hebrew.
Only the placing of the vowel-points makes any difference. If there is a mistake,
it is a mistake of the Massoretes, not of the Hebrew writer.
1. Location and Description:
There were two Ons in Egypt: one in Upper Egypt, An-res (Hermonthis); the other
in Lower Egypt, An-Meheet (Brugsch, Geogr. Inschr., 254, 255, numbers 1217, a,
b, 1218, 8708, 1225). The latter is the On referred to in the Bible. It lay about
20 miles North of the site of old Memphis, about 10 miles Northeast of the location
of modern Cairo. It has left until this time about 4 square miles of ruins within
the old walls. Little or nothing remains outside the walls.
On was built at the edge of the desert, which has now retreated some 3 or 4 miles
eastward, the result of the rising of the bed of the Nile by sediment from the
inundation, and the broadening of the area of infiltration which now carries the
water of the Nile that much to the East. The land around On has risen about 10
ft., and the waters of infiltration at the time of lowest Nile are now about 1
1/2 ft. above the floor-level of the temple.
2. History:
The history of On is very obscure, yet its very great importance is in no doubt.
No clear description of the ancient city or sanctuary has come down to us, but
there are so many incidental references, and so much is implied in ancient records,
that it stands out as of the very first importance, both as capital and sanctuary.
The city comes from the Ist Dynasty, when it was the seat of government, and indeed
must have been founded by the Ist Dynasty or have come down to it from pre-historic
time. From the IIIrd to the VIth Dynasty the seat of government was shifted from
On to Memphis, and in the XIIth Dynasty to Diospolis. Throughout these changes
On retained its religious importance. It had been the great sanctuary in the time
of the Pyramid Texts, the oldest religious texts of Egypt, and judging from the
evident great development of the temple of On at the time of the writing of the
texts, the city must have antedated them by considerable time (Budge, History
of Egypt, II, 83, 84, 108; Breasted, Development of Religion and Thought in Egypt,
chapters i, ii). The myth of Osiris makes even the charge against Set for the
murder of Osiris to have been preferred at Heliopolis (Breasted, op. cit., 34).
This certainly implies a very great age for the sanctuary at On. It contained
a temple of the sun under the name Ra, the sun, and also Atum, the setting sun,
or the sun of the Underworld. There was also a Phoenix Hall and asacred object
called a ben, probably a stone, and the origin of the name An, a "stone" or "pillar"
(compare Breasted, op. cit., 76, 11, and 71).
Though the XIIth Dynasty removed the capital to Diospolis, Usertsen I (Senwesret)
of that Dynasty erected a great obelisk at On in front of the entrance to the
temple. The situation of this obelisk in the templearea indicates that the great
temple was already more than a half-mile in length as early as the XIIth Dynasty.
The mate of this obelisk on the opposite side of the entrance seems not to have
been erected until the XVIIIth Dynasty. Its foundations were discovered in 1912
by Petrie. Some scraps of the granite of the obelisk bear inscriptions of Thothmes
III. A great Hyksos wall, also discovered by Petrie in 1912, exactly similar to
that of the fortified camp at Tel el Yehudiyeh, 4 miles North, makes it quite
certain that these usurpers between the Old Empire and the New fortified On as
the capital once more. The manifest subserviency of the priests of On in the story
of Joseph makes it most probable that the old capital at On had already been subjugated
in Joseph's time, and that within this old fortification still existing Joseph
ruled as prime minister of Egypt. Merenptah in his 5th year began to fortify On.
Sheshonk III called himself "divine prince of Annu," and seems to have made On
one of the greatest sanctuaries of his long reign. On still figured in Egyptian
history in the rebellion against Ashurbanipal. The city has been deserted since
the Persian invasion of 525 BC. Tradition makes the dwelling-place of Joseph and
Mary with the child Jesus, while in Egypt, to have been near Heliopolis.
The exploration of On was attempted by Schiaparelli, but was not carried out,
and his work has not been published. In 1912 Petrie began a systematic work of
excavation which, it is expected, will continue until the whole city has been
examined. The only great discovery of the first season was the Hyksos wall of
fortification. Its full import can only be determined by the continuance of the
exploration. |
(2) ('on; Aun): A Reubenite, son of Peleth, who took part with Dathan and Abiram
in their revolt against Moses (Numbers 16:1).
M. G. Kyle

Tags:
aven, bethshemesh, bible commentary, bible history, bible reference, bible study, city of destruction, city of the sun, cleopatra's needle, define, heliopolis, 'ir-ha-heres, revolt against moses, on, reubenite, son of peleth

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