or Rab'bath, great
(1.) "Rabbath of the children of Ammon," the chief
city of the Ammonites, among the eastern hills, some 20 miles
east of the
Jordan, on the southern of the two streams which united with the
Jabbok. Here the
bedstead of
Og was preserved (
Deut. 3:11), perhaps as a trophy of some victory gained by the Ammonites over the
king of
Bashan. After
David had subdued all their allies in a great
war, he sent
Joab with a strong force to take their city. For two years it held out against its assailants. It was while his
army was engaged in this protracted siege that David was guilty of that deed of shame which left a
blot on his character and cast a gloom over the
rest of his
life. At length, having taken the "royal city" (or the "city of waters,"
2 Sam. 12:27, i.e., the lower city on the
river, as distinguished from the citadel), Joab sent for David to direct the final assault (11:1; 12:26-31). The city was given up to plunder, and the people were ruthlessly put to
death, and "thus did he with all the cities of the children of Ammon." The
destruction of Rabbath was the last of David's conquests. His kingdom now reached its farthest limits (
2 Sam. 8:1-15;
1 Chr. 18:1-15). The capture of this city is referred to by
Amos (1:14),
Jeremiah (49:2, 3), and
Ezekiel (21:20; 25:5).
(2.) A city in the
hill country of
Judah (
Josh. 15:60), possibly the ruin Rubba, six miles north-east of Beit-Jibrin.