Goshen

Easton’s Bible Dictionary

  1. A district in Egypt where Jacob and his family settled, and in which they remained till the Exodus (Genesis 45:10; 46:28,29,31, etc.). It is called "the land of Goshen" (Genesis 47:27), and also simply "Goshen" (Genesis 46:28), and "the land of Rameses" (Genesis 47:11; Exodus 12:37), for the towns Pithom and Rameses lay within its borders; also Zoan or Tanis (Psalm 78:12). It lay on the east of the Nile, and apparently not far from the royal residence. It was "the best of the land" (Genesis 47:6,11), but is now a desert. It is first mentioned in Joseph's message to his father. It has been identified with the modern Wady Tumilat, lying between the eastern part of the Delta and the west border of Palestine. It was a pastoral district, where some of the king's cattle were kept (Genesis 47:6). The inhabitants were not exclusively Israelites (Exodus 3:22; 11:2; 12:35,36).
  2. A district in Palestine (Joshua 10:41; 11:16). It was a part of the maritime plain of Judah, and lay between Gaza and Gibeon.
  3. A town in the mountains of Judah (Joshua 15:51).
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  • Hitchcocks’s Bible Names
  • Smith’s Bible Dictionary