Tibhath standard
later by Solomon in the construction of the temple-furnishings (1Ch 18:8). In 2Sa 8:8 we must for the beTach of the Massoretic Text read with the Syriac Tebhach.
Where is Tibhath in the Bible?
Tibhath was a city located in ancient Syria, likely on the eastern slopes of the Anti-Lebanon mountains between the Anti-Lebanon range and the Euphrates River. The city appears in the Bible in 1 Chronicles 18:8, where it is mentioned as a place from which King David captured a large quantity of bronze during his military campaigns. This bronze was later used by Solomon in constructing the furnishings and vessels of the Temple in Jerusalem, making Tibhath significant to the development of Israel's most important religious structure. While the exact location of Tibhath remains unknown today, scholars believe it may correspond to places mentioned in ancient Egyptian texts, including the Tubihi referenced in the Tell el-Amarna Letters and Egyptian records from the time of Ramesses II.
Tibhath
ISBE 1915 (Public Domain)later by Solomon in the construction of the temple-furnishings (1Ch 18:8). In 2Sa 8:8 we must for the beTach of the Massoretic Text read with the Syriac Tebhach. It may be the same as the Tubihi of the Tell el-Amarna Letters; the Dibhu of the Karnak lists; and the Tubihi mentioned with Kadesh on the Orontes in the "Travels of an Egyptian" in the reign of Rameses II. The site is unknown, but it must have been on the eastern slopes of Anti-Lebanon, between which and the Euphrates we must locate Hadadezer's kingdom of Zobah. "Tebah" occurs also as an Aramaic personal or tribal name in Ge 22:24.
W. M. Christie
tib'-ni (tibhni; Codex Vaticanus Thamnei, Codex Alexandrinus Thamni, Lucian Thabennei): A rival of Omri for the throne of Israel after the death of Zimri (1Ki 16:21 f). This is the