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Text -- 1 Kings 7:1-9 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
The royal palace for himself, and for his successors.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:1 - -- Almost double the time to that in which the temple was built; because neither were the materials so far provided and prepared for this, as they were f...
Almost double the time to that in which the temple was built; because neither were the materials so far provided and prepared for this, as they were for the temple: nor did either he or his people use the same diligence in this, as in the other work; to which they were quickened by God's express command.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:2 - -- An house so called, because it was built in the forest of Lebanon, for a summer - seat, whither Solomon, having so many chariots and horses, might at ...
An house so called, because it was built in the forest of Lebanon, for a summer - seat, whither Solomon, having so many chariots and horses, might at any time retire with ease.
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Of the principal mansion; to which doubtless other buildings were adjoining.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:2 - -- Upon which the house was built, and between which there were four stately walks.
Upon which the house was built, and between which there were four stately walks.
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Which were laid for the floor of the second story.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:3 - -- So in this second story were only three rows of pillars, which was sufficient for the ornament of the second and for the support of the third story.
So in this second story were only three rows of pillars, which was sufficient for the ornament of the second and for the support of the third story.
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One directly opposite to the other, as is usual in well - contrived buildings.
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He speaks, of smaller windows or lights, which were over the several doors.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:6 - -- Supported by divers pillars, for the more magnificent entrance into the house; upon which also it is thought there were other rooms built, as in the h...
Supported by divers pillars, for the more magnificent entrance into the house; upon which also it is thought there were other rooms built, as in the house.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:6 - -- Now mentioned which is said to be before them; before the pillars on which the house of Lebanon stood.
Now mentioned which is said to be before them; before the pillars on which the house of Lebanon stood.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:6 - -- Or, and pillars; That is, fewer and lesser pillars for the support of the lesser porch.
Or, and pillars; That is, fewer and lesser pillars for the support of the lesser porch.
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Another porch or distinct room without the house.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:7 - -- The whole floor; or, from floor to floor, from the lower floor on the ground, to the upper floor which covered it.
The whole floor; or, from floor to floor, from the lower floor on the ground, to the upper floor which covered it.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:8 - -- That is, between the porch and the house, called therefore the middle court, 2Ki 20:4.
That is, between the porch and the house, called therefore the middle court, 2Ki 20:4.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:8 - -- Not for form or quantity, but for the materials and workmanship, the rooms being covered with cedar, and furnished with like ornaments.
Not for form or quantity, but for the materials and workmanship, the rooms being covered with cedar, and furnished with like ornaments.
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Buildings described here and in the former chapter.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:9 - -- Hewed in such measure and proportion as exact workmen use to hew ordinary stones.
Hewed in such measure and proportion as exact workmen use to hew ordinary stones.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:9 - -- Both on the inside of the buildings which were covered with cedar, and on the outside also.
Both on the inside of the buildings which were covered with cedar, and on the outside also.
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From the bottom to the top of the building.
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Wesley: 1Ki 7:9 - -- Not only on the outside of the front of the house, which being most visible, men are more careful to adorn; but also of the other side of the house, w...
Not only on the outside of the front of the house, which being most visible, men are more careful to adorn; but also of the other side of the house, which looked towards the great court belonging to the king's house.
JFB: 1Ki 7:1 - -- The time occupied in building his palace was nearly double that spent in the erection of the temple [1Ki 6:38], because neither had there been the sam...
The time occupied in building his palace was nearly double that spent in the erection of the temple [1Ki 6:38], because neither had there been the same previous preparations for it, nor was there the same urgency as in providing a place of worship, on which the national well-being so much depended.
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JFB: 1Ki 7:2 - -- It is scarcely possible to determine whether this was a different edifice from the former, or whether his house, the house of the forest of Lebanon, a...
It is scarcely possible to determine whether this was a different edifice from the former, or whether his house, the house of the forest of Lebanon, and the one for Pharaoh's daughter, were not parts of one grand palace. As difficult is it to decide what was the origin of the name; some supposing it was so called because built on Lebanon; others, that it was in or near Jerusalem, but contained such a profuse supply of cedar columns as to have occasioned this peculiar designation. We have a similar peculiarity of name in the building called the East India house, though situated in London. The description is conformable to the arrangement of Eastern palaces. The building stood in the middle of a great oblong square, which was surrounded by an enclosing wall, against which the houses and offices of those attached to the court were built. The building itself was oblong, consisting of two square courts, flanking a large oblong hall which formed the center, and was one hundred cubits long, by fifty broad. This was properly the house of the forest of Lebanon, being the part where were the cedar pillars of this hall. In front was the porch of judgment, which was appropriated to the transaction of public business. On the one side of this great hall was the king's house; and on the other the harem or royal apartments for Pharaoh's daughter (Est 2:3, Est 2:9). This arrangement of the palace accords with the Oriental style of building, according to which a great mansion always consists of three divisions, or separate houses--all connected by doors and passages--the men dwelling at one extremity, the women of the family at the other, while public rooms occupy the central part of the building.
Clarke: 1Ki 7:1 - -- Building his own house - This house is said to have been situated in Jerusalem, and probably was, what some call it, his winter’ s residence. I...
Building his own house - This house is said to have been situated in Jerusalem, and probably was, what some call it, his winter’ s residence. It is called the king’ s house, 1Ki 9:10.
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Clarke: 1Ki 7:2 - -- The house of the forest of Lebanon - It was not built in Lebanon, but is thought to have been on Mount Sion. And why it was called the house of the ...
The house of the forest of Lebanon - It was not built in Lebanon, but is thought to have been on Mount Sion. And why it was called the house of the forest of Lebanon does not appear; probably it was because it was built almost entirely of materials brought from that place. See the following verses.
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Clarke: 1Ki 7:7 - -- A porch for the throne - One porch appears to have been devoted to the purposes of administering judgment, which Solomon did in person.
A porch for the throne - One porch appears to have been devoted to the purposes of administering judgment, which Solomon did in person.
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Clarke: 1Ki 7:8 - -- A house for Pharaoh’ s daughter - This appears to have been a third house; probably the whole three made but one building, and were in the same...
A house for Pharaoh’ s daughter - This appears to have been a third house; probably the whole three made but one building, and were in the same place, but distinguished from each other; the first as Solomon’ s palace, the second as a house of judgment, a court-house; the third, the harem, or apartments for the women.
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TSK: 1Ki 7:4 - -- windows : 1Ki 7:5, 1Ki 6:4; Isa 54:12; Eze 40:16, Eze 40:22, Eze 40:25, Eze 40:29, Eze 40:33, Eze 40:36, Eze 41:26
light was against light : Heb. sigh...
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TSK: 1Ki 7:5 - -- doors and posts were square, with the windows : or, spaces and pillars were square in prospect, 1Ki 7:5
doors and posts were square, with the windows : or, spaces and pillars were square in prospect, 1Ki 7:5
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TSK: 1Ki 7:7 - -- a porch : 1Ki 6:3
for the throne : 1Ki 10:18-20; Psa 122:5; Isa 9:7
of judgment : 1Ki 3:9, 1Ki 3:28; Pro 20:8
from one side of the floor to the other ...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Ki 7:1 - -- Thirteen years - The thirteen years, i. e., counting from the end of the seven 1Ki 6:38. Solomon’ s buildings thus occupied him twenty yea...
Thirteen years - The thirteen years, i. e., counting from the end of the seven 1Ki 6:38. Solomon’ s buildings thus occupied him twenty years 1Ki 9:10; 2Ch 8:1, from the fourth year of his reign to the twenty-fourth. The difference in the time taken by the temple and the palace is to be accounted for,
(1) by the long period of preparation which preceded the actual building of the former 1Ch 22:2-4; 1Ki 5:13-18; and
(2) by the greater size of the palace, which consisted of several large ranges of buildings. (See the next note.)
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Barnes: 1Ki 7:2 - -- Many have supposed that the buildings mentioned in 1Ki 7:1-2, 1Ki 7:8, were three entirely distinct and separate buildings. But it is perhaps best t...
Many have supposed that the buildings mentioned in 1Ki 7:1-2, 1Ki 7:8, were three entirely distinct and separate buildings. But it is perhaps best to consider the "house"of 1Ki 7:1 as the palace proper - Solomon’ s own dwelling-house (see 1Ki 7:8); the house of 1Ki 7:2, as the state apartments; and the house for Pharaoh’ s daughter as the hareem or zenana; and to regard these three groups of buildings as distinct, though interconnected, and as together constituting what is else-where termed "the king’ s house"1Ki 9:10.
The house of the forest of Lebanon - This name was probably given from the supposed resemblance of the mass of cedar pillars, which was its main feature, to the Lebanon cedar forest. Its length of "a hundred cubits,"or 150 feet, was nearly twice as long as the entire temple without the porch. Some of the great halls in Assyrian palaces were occasionally as much as 180 feet.
The breadth "of fifty cubits,"or 75 feet, is a breadth very much greater than is ever found in Assyria, and one indicative of the employment in the two countries of quite different methods of roofing. By their use of pillars the Jews, like the Persians, were able to cover in a very wide space.
Four rows - The Septuagint gives "three rows."If the pillars were forty-five 1Ki 7:3, fifteen in a row, there should have been but three rows, as seems to have been the case in the old palace of Cyrus at Pasargadae. If there were four rows of fifteen, the number of pillars should have been sixty.
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Barnes: 1Ki 7:4 - -- Either three ranges of windows, one above the other, on either side of the house; or perhaps the three ranges were one in either side wall, and the ...
Either three ranges of windows, one above the other, on either side of the house; or perhaps the three ranges were one in either side wall, and the third in a wall down the middle of the hall, along the course of the midmost row of pillars. The windows were directly opposite one another, giving what we call a through light.
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Barnes: 1Ki 7:5 - -- All the doors and posts - The doorways, and the posts which formed them, seem to be intended. These were square at top, not arched or rounded. ...
All the doors and posts - The doorways, and the posts which formed them, seem to be intended. These were square at top, not arched or rounded. In Assyrian buildings arched doorways were not uncommon. The doorways also, like the windows, exactly faced one another.
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Barnes: 1Ki 7:6 - -- Probably the porch of the "House of the Forest."Porches of columns immediately in front of columnar chambers were a favorite feature of Persian arch...
Probably the porch of the "House of the Forest."Porches of columns immediately in front of columnar chambers were a favorite feature of Persian architecture. The whole verse should be translated, "And he made the porch of the pillars in length 50 cubits, and in breadth 30 cubits, and a porch before them (i. e., the pillars), and pillars, and a base (or step) before them."Most of the Persepolitan porches had small pillared chambers at some little distance in front of them.
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Barnes: 1Ki 7:7 - -- The porch or gate of justice still kept alive the likeness of the old patriarchal custom of sitting in judgment at the gate; exactly as the "Gate of...
The porch or gate of justice still kept alive the likeness of the old patriarchal custom of sitting in judgment at the gate; exactly as the "Gate of justice"still recalls it at Granada, and the Sublime Porte - "the Lofty Gate"- at Constantinople.
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Barnes: 1Ki 7:8 - -- Like unto this porch - i. e., of similar materials, hewn stone and cedar. The zenana could not have been a mere portico.
Like unto this porch - i. e., of similar materials, hewn stone and cedar. The zenana could not have been a mere portico.
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Barnes: 1Ki 7:9 - -- The stones were uniform - all cut to certain fixed measures of length, breadth, and thickness. They were not squared only on the face which showed, ...
The stones were uniform - all cut to certain fixed measures of length, breadth, and thickness. They were not squared only on the face which showed, but also on the sides which fell within the wall and were not seen. Saws appear in Assyrian sculptures of the age of Sennacherib; and fragments of an iron saw have been found at Nimrud.
Poole: 1Ki 7:1 - -- His own house the royal palace for himself, and for his successors. Or, his houses , the singular number being put for the plural. Thirteen years ...
His own house the royal palace for himself, and for his successors. Or, his houses , the singular number being put for the plural. Thirteen years almost double time to that in which the temple was built; because neither were the materials so far provided and prepared for this as they were for the temple; nor did either he or his people use the same alacrity and diligence in this as in the other work; nor had they the same obligations to this work as they had to that, to which they were quickened by God’ s express command, and by the necessity of setting up God’ s worship there, as the foundation of all the hopes and happiness both of king and people, whereas his building was only for Solomon’ s greater conveniency, and he had already a palace of David’ s building.
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Poole: 1Ki 7:2 - -- The house of the forest of Lebanon a house so called, either, first, Because it was built in the mountain and forest of Lebanon, for his recreation t...
The house of the forest of Lebanon a house so called, either, first, Because it was built in the mountain and forest of Lebanon, for his recreation there in summer time. But it is generally and more probably held, that it was in or near Jerusalem, both because there was
the throne of judgment 1Ki 7:7 , which was fittest to be in the place of his constant and usual residence; and because there was the chief magazine of arms, Isa 22:8 , and Solomon’ s golden shields were put there, as is manifest from 1Ki 10:17 14:25,26,28 , which no wise prince would do in a place so remote from his royal city, and in the utmost borders of his kingdom, as this was. Or rather, secondly, From some resemblance it might have with that place, for the pleasant shades and groves which were about it; nothing being more frequent, both in sacred and other writers, than to transfer the names of Carmel, or Tempe, or the like, to other places of the same nature and quality with them.
The length thereof to wit, of the principal mansion; to which doubtless other buildings were adjoined. Upon four rows of cedar pillars; upon which the house was built, and between which there were four stately walks.
With cedar beams upon the pillars which were laid for the floor of the second story.
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Poole: 1Ki 7:3 - -- So in this second story were only three rows of pillars, which was sufficient for the ornament of the second, and for the support of the third story...
So in this second story were only three rows of pillars, which was sufficient for the ornament of the second, and for the support of the third story.
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Poole: 1Ki 7:4 - -- Light was against light one directly opposite or answering to the other, as is usual in well-contrived buildings. In three ranks; one exactly under a...
Light was against light one directly opposite or answering to the other, as is usual in well-contrived buildings. In three ranks; one exactly under another.
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Poole: 1Ki 7:5 - -- He speaks either, first, of the same lights mentioned 1Ki 7:4 , it being the manner of the Hebrews to repeat the same things; or rather, of the smal...
He speaks either, first, of the same lights mentioned 1Ki 7:4 , it being the manner of the Hebrews to repeat the same things; or rather, of the smaller windows or lights, which were over the several doors, as the manner of many buildings is.
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Poole: 1Ki 7:6 - -- A porch of pillars i.e. supported by divers pillars, for the more magnificent entrance into the house; upon which also it is thought there were other...
A porch of pillars i.e. supported by divers pillars, for the more magnificent entrance into the house; upon which also it is thought there were other rooms built, as in the house.
The porch now mentioned, which is said to be
before them i.e. before the pillars on which the house of Lebanon stood, or before the doors and posts mentioned 1Ki 7:5 ; or, a porch , i.e. another and a lesser porch, which was before them, i.e. before the pillars of the greater porch now mentioned.
And the other pillars or, and pillars , i.e. fewer and lesser pillars for the support of the lesser porch.
The thick beam which was laid upon these pillars, as the others were, 1Ki 7:2 .
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Poole: 1Ki 7:7 - -- He made a porch another porch or distinct room without the house.
For the throne described 1Ki 10:18 .
Where he might judge the people that broug...
He made a porch another porch or distinct room without the house.
For the throne described 1Ki 10:18 .
Where he might judge the people that brought their causes before him.
From one side of the floor to the other i.e. the whole floor; or, from floor to floor , i.e. from the lower floor on the ground, to the upper floor which covered it.
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Poole: 1Ki 7:8 - -- Within the porch i.e. between the porch and the house, called therefore the middle court, 2Ki 20:4 .
A house for Pharaoh’ s daughter of which ...
Within the porch i.e. between the porch and the house, called therefore the middle court, 2Ki 20:4 .
A house for Pharaoh’ s daughter of which see 1Ki 3:1 2Ch 8:11 .
Like unto this porch not for form or quantity, but for the materials and workmanship, the rooms being covered with cedar, and furnished with like ornaments.
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Poole: 1Ki 7:9 - -- All these buildings described here and in the former chapter.
According to the measures of hewed stones either first, which were hewed in such meas...
All these buildings described here and in the former chapter.
According to the measures of hewed stones either first, which were hewed in such measure and proportion, as exact workmen used to hew ordinary stones; or, secondly, as large as common hewed stones, which are oft very great.
Within and without both on the inside of the buildings which were covered with cedar, and on the outside also.
From the foundation unto the coping from the bottom to the top of the building.
On the outside toward the great court not only on the outside of the front of the house, which being most visible, men are more careful to adorn; but also of the other side of the house, which looked towards the great court belonging to the king’ s house.
Haydock: 1Ki 7:1 - -- Thirteen. He was only twelve years and a half; since he finished both the temple and the palace in 20 years, chap. ix. 10. Salien observes that Sol...
Thirteen. He was only twelve years and a half; since he finished both the temple and the palace in 20 years, chap. ix. 10. Salien observes that Solomon's house was connected with the queen's, as well as with that part which was styled of the forest of Libanus, for their mutual recreation, the year before Christ 1023. The Roman Septuagint places the 13 first verses at the end, ver. 51. (Haydock)
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Haydock: 1Ki 7:2 - -- Libanus. So it was called, on account of the many cedar pillars brought from that mountain; or because many trees and shrubs were planted in the vi...
Libanus. So it was called, on account of the many cedar pillars brought from that mountain; or because many trees and shrubs were planted in the vicinity. (Calmet) ---
Libanus might also be seen from it, and refreshing breezes be felt. (Ar.[Arbuthnot?] Mont.[Montanus?]) ---
The palace stood on the eastern part of Sion, and to the west of the temple. (Menochius) ---
The vale between them had been filled up, at a vast expense, and a sort of bridge erected, which was called Mello. Thus the palace of David, on the west of Sion, and this of Solomon, served to protect the temple, and to keep the citizens in awe. (Salien) ---
Sanchez declines giving the dimensions of this palace, as they are not satisfactory. (Menochius) ---
Here Solomon resided, and was served in gold, (Calmet) adorning his palace with shields and targets of the same precious metal, chap. x. 16, 21. ---
Cubits. The more sacred part of the temple was only 60, 20, and 30 cubits, chap. vi. 2. But there were various other appendages and towers. This palace must have been very extensive. ---
And four. Hebrew, "upon four rows of cedar pillars, with cedar beams upon the pillars." (Haydock) -- One row of these might be rather pilasters, against the wall; (ver. 3,) so that there would be three covered galleries, before the apartments, each supported on 15 pillars. (Calmet)
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Haydock: 1Ki 7:4 - -- Set, &c. Hebrew, "and windows in three rows, over-against one another; ( 5 ) and all the doors and posts square with the windows: and light was agai...
Set, &c. Hebrew, "and windows in three rows, over-against one another; ( 5 ) and all the doors and posts square with the windows: and light was against light, in three rows." (Haydock) ---
The palace had three stories; but the galleries before it were of equal height with it.
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Haydock: 1Ki 7:6 - -- Porch. Septuagint seem to retain the original word ulam, as they read Greek: ailam; whence our hall, and the Latin aula, may be derived. (H...
Porch. Septuagint seem to retain the original word ulam, as they read Greek: ailam; whence our hall, and the Latin aula, may be derived. (Haydock) ---
It was a court surrounded by pillars and galleries, in from of the palace. (Calmet) ---
Another. Hebrew, "the porch before them, (pillars) and the pillars, and the thick beam before them."
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Haydock: 1Ki 7:7 - -- Tob. Hebrew, "the other side." (Haydock) ---
The eastern princes generally sit before their palace to give judgment; and hence that of the Ottoman...
Tob. Hebrew, "the other side." (Haydock) ---
The eastern princes generally sit before their palace to give judgment; and hence that of the Ottoman emperors is styled the Porte, (Calmet) or "gate."
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Haydock: 1Ki 7:8 - -- House. In the form of a recess or alcove, at the end of one of the aforesaid porches, and probably in that which was nearer the palace. Guards woul...
House. In the form of a recess or alcove, at the end of one of the aforesaid porches, and probably in that which was nearer the palace. Guards would be stationed in the other. (Haydock) ---
This is the idea which travellers have given us of the palaces in the East. They consisted of various apartments, galleries, and courts. Under the outward porch there are guards standing, in a double row; and hence there is a communication with other parts of the house, and with the apartments of the women, which are far removed, and inaccessible to strangers. The women still continue to have separate tents, or apartments; as they had in the days of Sara, Esther, Herodias, &c., Genesis xxiv., Esther i. 11., and Matthew xiv. 8. (Calmet) ---
Pharao. Till it was finished, this lady had lodged in David's palace; though as it was deemed in a manner sacred, on account of the presence of the ark, it was judged expedient to remove her, 2 Paralipomenon viii. 11. (Haydock) ---
Perhaps she had begun to manifest some signs of a relapse towards idolatry, into which she is supposed chiefly to have induced her husband, chap. xi. 4. (Salien)
Gill: 1Ki 7:1 - -- But Solomon was building his own house thirteen years,.... He made more haste with the house of God than with his own, for that was but seven years in...
But Solomon was building his own house thirteen years,.... He made more haste with the house of God than with his own, for that was but seven years in building; which showed greater regard to the honour of God then to his own glory, or even convenience; nor was this built till after that:
and finished all his house; or houses he undertook to build, the singular for the plural; even the house of God, his own palace, and that for the daughter of Pharaoh, and that which is next mentioned, which were in all twenty years building, 1Ki 9:10.
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Gill: 1Ki 7:2 - -- He built also the house of the forest of Lebanon,.... Besides the temple, his own palace, and the queen's; so called, not because it was built on Moun...
He built also the house of the forest of Lebanon,.... Besides the temple, his own palace, and the queen's; so called, not because it was built on Mount Lebanon, which lay at the northern border of the land, at a great distance from Jerusalem, whereas this was both a magazine of arms, and a court of judicature, 1Ki 7:7; see 1Ki 10:17; neither of which can be supposed to be far from Jerusalem; but because not only it was built of the cedars of Lebanon, but in a situation, and among groves of trees which resembled it; it seems to have been a summer house; and so the Targum calls it, a royal house of refreshment:
the length thereof was an hundred cubits, and the breadth thereof fifty and the height thereof thirty cubits; so that it was in every measure larger than the temple; and, there was good reason for it, since into that only the priests entered; whereas into this went not only Solomon's family but his courtiers and nobles, and all foreign ambassadors, and whoever had any business with him, which required various rooms to receive them in:
upon four rows of cedar pillars; or piazzas:
with cedar beams upon the pillars; which laid the floor for the second story.
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Gill: 1Ki 7:3 - -- And it was covered with cedar above the beams, that lay on forty five pillars, fifteen in a row. On the second floor were three rows of pillars, fifte...
And it was covered with cedar above the beams, that lay on forty five pillars, fifteen in a row. On the second floor were three rows of pillars, fifteen in a row, which made forty five, that stood to east, north, and south; and upon these pillars beams, which were the floor of the third story, over which was a roof of cedar wood.
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Gill: 1Ki 7:4 - -- And there were windows in three rows,.... Both in the second and third stories, east, north, and south, there being none in the west, where the porch ...
And there were windows in three rows,.... Both in the second and third stories, east, north, and south, there being none in the west, where the porch stood:
and light was against light in three ranks; or the windows, through which light was let, answered to each other.
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Gill: 1Ki 7:5 - -- And all the doors and posts were square with the windows,.... The doors into the several stories and apartments, and the posts and lintel of them, and...
And all the doors and posts were square with the windows,.... The doors into the several stories and apartments, and the posts and lintel of them, and the windows over them, were all square:
and light was against light in three ranks; they answered one another as before.
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Gill: 1Ki 7:6 - -- And he made a porch of pillars,.... At the west end of the house:
and the length thereof was fifty cubits; answerable to the breadth of the house:
...
And he made a porch of pillars,.... At the west end of the house:
and the length thereof was fifty cubits; answerable to the breadth of the house:
and the breadth thereof thirty cubits: which, added to the length of the house, made it one hundred and thirty:
and the porch was before them; the four rows of cedar pillars of the house, 1Ki 7:2 this porch was either for his guards to keep watch in; or for his courtiers to walk in, sheltered from rain or the like; or perhaps only for grandeur and magnificence:
and the other pillars and the thick beam were before them; the pillars of the porch, on which were laid beams of cedar for a storey over them, and so on; these were before and right against, and answered to the pillars of the house.
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Gill: 1Ki 7:7 - -- Then he made a porch for the throne,.... The ivory throne on which he sat to hear and try causes, 1Ki 10:18,
where he might judge, even the porch o...
Then he made a porch for the throne,.... The ivory throne on which he sat to hear and try causes, 1Ki 10:18,
where he might judge, even the porch of judgment: which had its name from thence; this was either in his house in the forest of Lebanon, or in his palace at Jerusalem; the former seems best:
and it was covered with cedar from one side of the floor unto the other; that is, the whole floor.
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Gill: 1Ki 7:8 - -- And his house where he dwelt,.... Which was properly his dwellingplace, that part of the house where he usually resided:
had another court within ...
And his house where he dwelt,.... Which was properly his dwellingplace, that part of the house where he usually resided:
had another court within the porch, which was of the like work; a court between that and the porch, called the inner court, 2Ki 20:4.
Solomon made also a house for Pharaoh's daughter, whom he had taken to wife; see 1Ki 3:1,
like unto this porch: being built of the same sort of materials, though in a different form.
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Gill: 1Ki 7:9 - -- All these were of costly stones,.... Marble, porphyry, &c.
according to the measure of hewed stones, sawed with saws, within and without; they were...
All these were of costly stones,.... Marble, porphyry, &c.
according to the measure of hewed stones, sawed with saws, within and without; they were all hewed, and squared, and polished, and so they appeared both on the inside of the building, and without:
even from the foundation unto the coping; from the bottom to the top:
and so on the outside toward the great court: where the people used to assemble when they had causes to be tried, and was adjoining to the king's house.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: 1Ki 7:4 Heb “and framed [windows in] three rows, and opening to opening three times.” The precise meaning of this description is uncertain. Anothe...
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NET Notes: 1Ki 7:5 Heb “and all the entrances and the doorposts [had] four frames, and in front of opening to opening three times” (the precise meaning of th...
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NET Notes: 1Ki 7:6 Heb “and a porch was in front of them (i.e., the aforementioned pillars) and pillars and a roof in front of them (i.e., the aforementioned pilla...
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NET Notes: 1Ki 7:7 The Hebrew text reads, “from the floor to the floor.” The second occurrence of the term הַקַּרְ&...
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NET Notes: 1Ki 7:8 Heb “and a house he was making for the daughter of Pharaoh, whom Solomon had taken, like this porch.”
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NET Notes: 1Ki 7:9 The precise meaning of the Hebrew word טְפָחוֹת (tÿfakhot) is uncertain, but it is clear that the...
Geneva Bible: 1Ki 7:1 But Solomon was building his own house thirteen years, and he ( a ) finished all his house.
( a ) After he had built the temple.
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Geneva Bible: 1Ki 7:2 He built also the house ( b ) of the forest of Lebanon; the length thereof [was] an hundred cubits, and the breadth thereof fifty cubits, and the heig...
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Geneva Bible: 1Ki 7:4 And [there were] windows [in] three rows, and light [was] ( c ) against light [in] three ranks.
( c ) There were as many and like proportion on the o...
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Geneva Bible: 1Ki 7:6 And he made a porch of pillars; the length thereof [was] fifty cubits, and the breadth thereof thirty cubits: and the porch [was] before ( d ) them: a...
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Geneva Bible: 1Ki 7:7 Then he made a porch ( e ) for the throne where he might judge, [even] the porch of judgment: and [it was] covered with cedar from one side of the flo...
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Geneva Bible: 1Ki 7:9 All these [were of] costly stones, according to the measures of hewed stones, sawed with saws, within and without, even from the foundation unto ( f )...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Ki 7:1-51
TSK Synopsis: 1Ki 7:1-51 - --1 The building of Solomon's house.2 Of the house of Lebanon.6 Of the porch of pillars.7 Of the porch of judgment.8 Of the house for Pharaoh's daughter...
MHCC -> 1Ki 7:1-12
MHCC: 1Ki 7:1-12 - --All Solomon's buildings, though beautiful, were intended for use. Solomon began with the temple; he built for God first, and then his other buildings....
Matthew Henry -> 1Ki 7:1-12
Matthew Henry: 1Ki 7:1-12 - -- Never had any man so much of the spirit of building as Solomon had, nor to better purpose; he began with the temple, built for God first, and then a...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Ki 7:1-12
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ki 7:1-12 - --
Erection of the royal palace . - 1Ki 7:1 is closely connected in form with 1Ki 6:38, and contains a summary account of the building, which is more ...
Constable: 1Ki 1:1--11:43 - --I. THE REIGN OF SOLOMON chs. 1--11
The Holy Spirit led the writer of Kings to give an interpretation of history,...
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Constable: 1Ki 5:1--8:66 - --C. Solomon's Greatest Contribution chs. 5-8
Solomon's outstanding contribution to the nation of Israel, ...
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