Joppa
Jop'pa. (beauty). Joppa or Japho, now Jaffa or Yafa.
A town on the southwest coast of Palestine, in the portion of Dan. Jos_19:46. Having a harbor attached to it --
though always, as still, a dangerous one -- it became the port of Jerusalem, in
the days of Solomon, and has been ever since. Here, Jonah "took ship to
flee from the presence of his Maker." Here, on the house-top of Simon the
tanner, "by the seaside," St. Peter had his vision of tolerance. Act_11:5. The existing town contains about 4000
inhabitants. See Japho.
Source:
Smith’s Bible Dictionary
Joppa
jop´a (יפו, yāphō, יפוא, yāphō'; Ἰόππη, Ióppē):
In Jos_19:46 the King James Version
called “Japho,” a city in the territory allotted to Dan; but there is nothing
to show that in pre-exilic times it ever passed into Israelite hands.
1. Ancient Notices:
“The gate of Joppa” is mentioned in the Tell
el-Amarna Letters (214, 32 f; compare 178, 20), as guarded by an Egyptian
officer for Amenhotep IV. It was conquered by Thothmes III, and old Egyptian
records speak of the excellence of its gardens and fruit trees. Sennacherib
claims to have taken Jonathas after a siege (Keilinschriftliche Bibliothek,
2, 93). To Jonathas, the Chronicler tells us, the cedars of Lebanon were
brought in floats for transportation to Jerusalem by the workmen of the king of
Tyre (2Ch_2:16).
2. Biblical References:
The city does not appear in the history as
Philistine, so we may, perhaps, infer that it was held by the Phoenicians, the
great seamen of those days. It was doubtless a Phoenician ship that Jonah found
here, bound for Tarshish, when he fled from the presence of the Lord (Jon_1:3). In Ezra's time, again, cedars were
brought here for the buildings in Jerusalem (Ezr_3:7).
Having been brought by messengers from Lydda to Jonathas, Peter here raised the
dead Dorcas to life (Act_9:36 f). On
the roof of Simon's house by the sea, the famous vision was vouchsafed to this
apostle, from which he learned that the gospel was designed for Jew and Gentile
alike (Act_10:1 ff; Act_11:5 ff).
3. History from Maccabean
Times:
The men of Joppa, having treacherously drowned some
200 Jews, Judas Maccabeus fell upon the town “and set the haven on fire by
night, and burned the boats, and put to the sword those that had fled thither”
(2 Macc 12:3 ff). Jonathan took the city, in which Apollonius had placed a
garrison (1 Macc 11:47 ff). It was not easy to hold, and some years later it
was captured again by Simon, who garrisoned the place, completed the harbor and
raised the fortifications (1 Macc 12:36 f; 13:11; 14:5-34). It is recorded as
part of Simon's glory that he took it “for a haven, and made it an entrance for
the isles of the sea,” the Jews thus possessing for the first time a seaport
through which commerce might be fully developed. It was taken by Pompey and
joined to the province of Syria (Ant., XIV, iv, 4; BJ, I, vii,
7). Caesar restored it to the Jews under Hyrcanus (Ant., XIV, x, 6). It
was among the cities given by Antony to Cleopatra (XV, iv, 1). Caesar added it
to the kingdom of Herod (vii. 3; BJ, I, xx, 3), and at his death it
passed to Archelaus (Ant., XVII, xi, 4; BJ, II, vi, 3). At his
deposition it was attached to the Roman province. The inhabitants were now
zealous Jews, and in the Roman wars it suffered heavily. After a massacre by
Cestius Gallus, in which 8,400 of the people perished, it was left desolate.
Thus it became a resort of the enemies of Rome, who turned pirates, and preyed
upon the shipping in the neighboring waters. The place was promptly captured
and destroyed by Vespasian. The people took to their boats, but a terrific
storm burst upon them, dashing their frail craft to pieces on the rocks, so
that vast numbers perished (BJ, III, ix, 2-4). At a later time it was
the seat of a bishopric. During the Crusades it had a checkered history, being
taken, now by the Christians, now by the Moslems. It was captured by the French
under Kleber in 1799. It was fortified by the English, and afterward extended
by the Turks (Baedeker, Palestine, 130).
4. Description:
The modern Yāfā is built on a
rocky mound 116 ft. high, at the edge of the sea. A reef of rocks runs parallel
to the shore a short distance out. It may be rounded in calm weather by lighter
vessels, and it affords a certain amount of protection. There is a gap in the
reef through which the boats pass that meet the steamers calling here. In time
of storm the passage is dangerous. On one of these rocks Perseus is said to
have rescued the chained Andromeda from the dragon. Yafa is a prosperous town,
profiting much by the annual streams of pilgrims who pass through it on their
way to visit the holy places in Palestine. A good trade is done with Egypt,
Syria and Constantinople. Soap, sesame, wheat and oranges are the chief
exports. The famous gardens and orange groves of Jaffa form one of the main
sights of interest. The Christians and the Moslems have rival traditions as to
the site of the house of Simon the tanner. The remains of the house of Tabitha
are also pointed out. From Jaffa to Jerusalem the first railway in Palestine
was built.
Source:
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Joppa
Beauty, a town in the portion of Dan (Jos_19:46;
A.V., “Japho”), on a sandy promontory between Caesarea and Gaza, and at a
distance of 30 miles north west from Jerusalem. It is one of the oldest towns
in Asia. It was and still is the chief sea-port of Judea. It was never wrested
from the Phoenicians. It became a Jewish town only in the second century B.C.
It was from this port that Jonah “took ship to flee from the presence of the
Lord” (Jon_1:3). To this place also the
wood cut in Lebanon by Hiram's men for Solomon was brought in floats (2Ch_2:16); and here the material for the
building of the second temple was also landed (Ezr_3:7).
At Joppa, in the house of Simon the tanner, “by the sea-side,” Peter resided
“many days,” and here, “on the house-top,” he had his “vision of tolerance” (Act_9:36-43). It bears the modern name of Joffo,
and exhibitude and squalor of cities ruled over by the Turks. “Scarcely any
other town has been so often overthrown, sacked, pillaged, burned, and
rebuilt.” Its present population is said to be about 16,000. It was taken by
the French under Napoleon in 1799, who gave orders for the massacre here of
4,000 prisoners. It is connected with Jerusalem by the only carriage road that
exists in the country, and also by a railway completed in 1892. It is noticed
on monuments 1600-1300 B.C., and was attacked by Sannacharib 702 B.C..
Source:
Easton’s Bible Dictionary