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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 1Ki 9:27 - -- For which the Tyrians were famous. He sent also ships to join with Solomon's, not from Tyre, the city of Phoenicia; but from an island in the Red - se...
For which the Tyrians were famous. He sent also ships to join with Solomon's, not from Tyre, the city of Phoenicia; but from an island in the Red - sea, called Tyre, because it was a colony of the Tyrians, as Strabo notes.

Wesley: 1Ki 9:28 - -- A place famous for the plenty and fineness of the gold there. It is agreed, that it was a part of the East - Indies, probably Ceylon, which though ver...
A place famous for the plenty and fineness of the gold there. It is agreed, that it was a part of the East - Indies, probably Ceylon, which though very remote from us, yet was far nearer the Red - sea, from whence they might easily sail to it in those ancient times, because they might (according to the manner of those first ages) sail all along near the coast, though the voyage was thereby more tedious, which was the reason why three years were spent in it. And here, and here only were to be had all the commodities which Solomon fetched from Ophir, 1Ki 10:22.

Wesley: 1Ki 9:28 - -- In all there came to the king four hundred and fifty talents, whereof it seems thirty talents were allowed to Hiram and his men, and so there were onl...
In all there came to the king four hundred and fifty talents, whereof it seems thirty talents were allowed to Hiram and his men, and so there were only four hundred and twenty that came clear into the king's treasury.
JFB: 1Ki 9:28 - -- A general name, like the East or West Indies with us, for all the southern regions lying on the African, Arabian, or Indian seas, in so far as at that...
A general name, like the East or West Indies with us, for all the southern regions lying on the African, Arabian, or Indian seas, in so far as at that time known [HEEREN].
Clarke -> 1Ki 9:28
Clarke: 1Ki 9:28 - -- And they came to Ophir - No man knows certainly, to this day, where this Ophir was situated. There were two places of this name; one somewhere in In...
And they came to Ophir - No man knows certainly, to this day, where this Ophir was situated. There were two places of this name; one somewhere in India, beyond the Ganges, and another in Arabia, near the country of the Sabaeans, mentioned by Job, Job 22:24 : Then shalt thou lay up gold as dust; and the gold of Ophir as the stones of the brooks. And Job 28:16 : It cannot be valued with the gold of Ophir, with the precious onyx, or the sapphire. Calmet places this country at the sources of the Euphrates and Tigris
But there are several reasons to prove that this was not the Ophir of the Bible, which it seems was so situated as to require a voyage of three years long to go out, load, and return. Mr. Bruce has discussed this subject at great length; see his Travels, vol. ii., chap. iv., p. 354, etc. He endeavors to prov
1. That Ezion-geber is situated on the Elanitic branch of the Arabian Gulf or Red Sea
2. That Tharshish is Moka, near to Melinda, in the Indian Ocean, in about three degrees south latitude
3. That Ophir lies somewhere in the land of Sofala, or in the vicinity of the Zimbeze river, opposite the island of Madagascar, where there have been gold and silver mines in great abundance from the remotest antiquity. And he proves
4. That no vessel could perform this voyage in less than Three years, because of the monsoons; that more time need not be employed, and that this is the precise time mentioned in 1Ki 10:22
5. That this is the country of the queen of Sheba, or Sabia, or Azeba, who on her visit to Solomon, brought him one hundred and twenty talents of gold, and of spices and precious stones great store, 1Ki 10:10. And that gold, ivory, silver, etc., are the natural productions of this country
To illustrate and prove his positions he has given a map on a large scale, "showing the track of Solomon’ s fleet in their three years’ voyage from the Elanitic Gulf to Ophir and Tharshish;"to which, and his description, I must refer the reader.

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Ki 9:27 - -- Shipmen - See 1Ki 5:6 note. With respect to the acquaintance of the Phoenicians with this particular sea, it may be observed that they are not ...
Shipmen - See 1Ki 5:6 note. With respect to the acquaintance of the Phoenicians with this particular sea, it may be observed that they are not unlikely to have had trading settlements there, as they had in the Persian Gulf, even at this early period. The commerce with Ophir was probably an established trade, previously either in their hands or in those of the Egyptians, when Solomon determined to have a share in it. The Egyptians had navigated the other arm of the Red Sea, and perhaps its lower parts, from a much more ancient period.

Barnes: 1Ki 9:28 - -- On Ophir, see the marginal reference note. Among the various opinions three predominate; all moderns, except a very few, being in favor of Arabia, I...
On Ophir, see the marginal reference note. Among the various opinions three predominate; all moderns, except a very few, being in favor of Arabia, India, or Eastern Africa. Arabia’ s claims are supported by the greatest number.
Poole: 1Ki 9:27 - -- The Tyrians were famous for
knowledge of the sea He sent also ships to join with Solomon’ s, 2Ch 8:18 ; not from Tyre, the famous city of Pho...
The Tyrians were famous for
knowledge of the sea He sent also ships to join with Solomon’ s, 2Ch 8:18 ; not from Tyre, the famous city of Phoenicia, which was in the midland sea, from whence he could not sail to the Red Sea without fetching a vast compass; but from an island in the Red Sea, called Tyre, because it was a colony of the Tyrians, as Strabo notes.

Poole: 1Ki 9:28 - -- Ophir a place famous for the plenty and fineness of the gold there; of which see Gen 2:11,12 Job 22:24 28:16 Psa 45:9 Isa 13:12 . It is manifest and ...
Ophir a place famous for the plenty and fineness of the gold there; of which see Gen 2:11,12 Job 22:24 28:16 Psa 45:9 Isa 13:12 . It is manifest and agreed that it was a part of the East Indies, which though very remote from us, yet was far nearer to the Red Sea, from whence they might easily sail to it in these ancient times, because they needed not to go far from the coast to come to it, because they might (according to the manner of these first ages) sail all along near the coast, though the voyage was thereby more tedious, which was the reason why three years were spent in it. And here, and here only, were to bc had all the commodities which Solomon fetched from Ophir, 1Ki 10:22 .
Four hundred and twenty talents: in all there came to the king four hundred and fifty talents, whereof it seems thirty talents were allowed by Solomon to Hiram and his men for the voyage, and so there were only four hundred and twenty that came clearly into the king’ s treasury.
Haydock: 1Ki 9:27 - -- Fleet, from Tyre, (Calmet) or from the island of the same name, in the Red Sea. (Grotius)
Fleet, from Tyre, (Calmet) or from the island of the same name, in the Red Sea. (Grotius)

Haydock: 1Ki 9:28 - -- Ophir, in the East Indies; (Menochius) an island called Taprobana, or Sumatra; (Salien) or a country near the heads of the Euphrates and Tigris. (Ca...
Ophir, in the East Indies; (Menochius) an island called Taprobana, or Sumatra; (Salien) or a country near the heads of the Euphrates and Tigris. (Calmet, Dissert.) ---
The variety of opinions is astonishing. Huet fixes upon Sophola, on the eastern coast of Africa; and supposes that the fleet of Hiram might proceed down a canal, which seems to have been formerly opened for a communication between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. (Strabo i. 17., and ii.) (Du Hamel) ---
The various commodities might be procured either in Africa, or, on the voyage, in other countries. (Haydock) ---
Twenty. Paralipomenon reads fifty. The letter c (20) and n (50) may easily have been mistaken. (Huet) ---
The thirty talents might be the value of other parts of the cargo, or might be spent in repairs and wages. (Calmet) ---
The sum here mentioned might be also refined gold. (Menochius)
Gill: 1Ki 9:27 - -- And Hiram sent in his navy his servants,.... And, according to 2Ch 8:18, ships also but how he could send them from Tyre, which lay in the Mediterrane...
And Hiram sent in his navy his servants,.... And, according to 2Ch 8:18, ships also but how he could send them from Tyre, which lay in the Mediterranean sea, to the above ports in the Red sea, without going a great way round, is not easy to conceive. Perhaps, as Gussetins conjectures c, Hiram had a port in the Red sea for building and sending out ships, for the sake of his eastern navigation, and from thence he sent them to Solomon's ports in the same sea; but if what R. Japhet d observes is true, that the Red sea is mixed with the sea of Joppa by means of the river Rhinocurura, as is remarked by a learned man e and who approves of the observation, and thinks it does not deserve the censure Dr. Lightfoot f passes on it. If this, I say, can be supported, the difficulty is removed: so Abarbinel asserts g, that a branch of the Nile flows into the Red sea: and another, passing through Alexandria, runs into the Mediterranean sea. This is the first navy of ships we read of; in the construction of which, as well as in the art of navigation, the Tyrians no doubt were greatly assisting to Solomon's servants, and which appears by what follows; and they are said h to be the first that made use of ships; and the invention of ships of burden, or merchant ships, such as these were, is by Pliny i ascribed to Hippus the Tyrian: and the Tyrians were famous for merchandise, which they could not carry on with foreign nations without shipping; see Isa 23:8, the servants Hiram sent in Solomon's navy were
shipmen that had knowledge of the sea; of sea coasts and ports, of the manner of guiding and managing ships at sea, and of the whole art of navigation, so far as then known, for which the Tyrians were famous; see Eze 27:3,
with the servants of Solomon; to instruct and assist them in naval affairs, they not having been used thereunto.

Gill: 1Ki 9:28 - -- And they came to Ophir,.... About which place there are various opinions; some take it to be the little island of Zocatora, on the eastern coast of Af...
And they came to Ophir,.... About which place there are various opinions; some take it to be the little island of Zocatora, on the eastern coast of Africa, at a small distance from the straits of Babelmandel; others the island of Ceylon; others Sofala in Africa; some k Peru in America; Vatablus the island of Hispaniola in the West Indies, discovered by Columbus, and who thought l himself that he had found the land of Ophir, because of the quantity of gold in it; others the southern part of Arabia; but the most reasonable opinion is, says my author m, that it is a rich country in Malacca, which is a peninsula in the true Red sea (that part of the ocean which divides Asia from Africa), known by the name of the "golden Chersonese", and which agrees with Josephus n; and at twelve leagues from Malacca there is a very high mountain, which by the natives is called Ophir, and is reported to be, or to have been, very rich in gold, though at present only some tin mines are worked there; and Kircher o says the word Ophir is a Coptic or Egyptian word, by which the ancient Egyptians used to call that India which contains the kingdoms of Malabar, Zeilan, the golden Chersonese, and, the islands belonging to it, Sumatra, Molucca, Java, and other neighbouring golden islands. So Varrerius p thinks that all that coast in which are contained Pegu, Malaca, and Somatra, is Ophir; which places, besides gold, abound with elephants, apes, and parrots. In the island of Sumatra gold is now found, especially in Achin, in great plenty; in which is a mountain, called the "golden mountain", near the mines q Reland r takes Ophir to be the country round about a city called Oupara or Suphara, in the East Indies, where now stands Goa, the most famous mart in all India at this day for many of those things Solomon traded thither for. Though after all perhaps there was no such place originally as Ophir in India; only the gold brought from thence was like that of Ophir in Arabia, and therefore they called the place so from whence it was had; see Job 22:24.
and fetched from thence gold four hundred and twenty talents, and brought it to King Solomon; which according to Brerewood s amounted to 1,890,000 pounds of our money; and according to another writer t 5,132,400 ducats of gold. Abarbinel says a talent of gold was equal to 12,300 Venetian ducats; in 2Ch 8:18 it is said, that four hundred and fifty talents of gold were brought to Solomon; perhaps thirty might be expended in the voyage, or paid to Hiram's servants for their wages, as some Jewish writers observe; or in the bulk or ore it might be four hundred and fifty talents, but when purified only four hundred and twenty, as Grotius remarks; either way removes the difficulty; though some think different voyages are respected here and there; of the gold of Ophir frequent mention is made in Scripture.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: 1Ki 9:27 Heb “and Hiram sent with the fleet his servants, men of ships, [who] know the sea, [to be] with the servants of Solomon.”

NET Notes: 1Ki 9:28 The Hebrew term כִּכָּר (kikkar, “circle”) refers generally to something that is round. When use...
Geneva Bible -> 1Ki 9:28
Geneva Bible: 1Ki 9:28 And they came to Ophir, and fetched from thence gold, ( k ) four hundred and twenty talents, and brought [it] to king Solomon.
( k ) In (2Ch 8:18), 3...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Ki 9:1-28
TSK Synopsis: 1Ki 9:1-28 - --1 God's covenant in a vision with Solomon.10 The mutual presents of Solomon and Hiram.15 In Solomon's works the Gentiles were his bondmen, the Israeli...
MHCC -> 1Ki 9:15-28
MHCC: 1Ki 9:15-28 - --Here is a further account of Solomon's greatness. He began at the right end, for he built God's house first, and finished that before he began his own...
Matthew Henry -> 1Ki 9:15-28
Matthew Henry: 1Ki 9:15-28 - -- We have here a further account of Solomon's greatness. I. His buildings. He raised a great levy both of men and money, because he projected a great ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Ki 9:10-28
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Ki 9:10-28 - --
The Means by which the Buildings were Erected. - In order that all which still remained to be said concerning Solomon's buildings might be grouped t...
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,...

Constable: 1Ki 9:10-28 - --2. Further evidences of God's blessing 9:10-28
Somewhat after the mid-point of Solomon's 40-year...
