Word Summary
Harmagedōn: Har-Magedon
Original Word: ἉρμαγεδώνTransliteration: Harmagedōn
Phonetic Spelling: (ar-mag-ed-dohn')
Part of Speech: Proper Noun, Indeclinable
Short Definition: Har-Magedon
Meaning: Har-Magedon
Strong's Concordance
Armageddon.
Of Hebrew origin (har and Mgiddown); Armageddon (or Har-Meggiddon), a symbolic name -- Armageddon.
see HEBREW har
see HEBREW Mgiddown
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 717: ἉρμαγεδώνἉρμαγεδών (Griesbach
Ἁρμαγεδών;
WH ἁρ Μαγεδων, see their Introductory § 408;
Tdf. Proleg., p. 106) or (so
Rec.)
Ἁρμαγεδδών,
Har-Magedon or
Armageddon, indeclinable proper name of an imaginary place:
Revelation 16:16. Many, following Beza and Glassius, suppose that the name is compounded of
הַר mountain, and
מְגִדּו or
מְגִדּון, the
Sept. Μαγεδω,
Μαγεδδω. Megiddo was a city of the Manassites, situated in the great plain of the tribe of Issachar, and famous for a double slaughter, first of the Canaanites (
Judges 5:19), and again of the Israelites (
2 Kings 23:29;
2 Chronicles 35:22, cf.
Zechariah 12:11); so that in the Apocalypse it would signify the place where the kings opposing Christ were to be destroyed with a slaughter like that which the Canaanites or the Israelites had experienced of old. But since those two overthrows are said to have taken place
ἐπί ὕδατι Μαγεδων (Judges, the passage cited) and
ἐν τῷ πεδίῳ Μαγεδων (2 Chronicles, the passage cited), it is not easy to perceive what can be the meaning of
the mountain of Megiddo, which could be none other than
Carmel. Hence, for one, I think the conjecture of L. Capellus (i. e. Louis Cappel (akin to that of Drusius, see the commentaries)) to be far more easy and probable, viz. that
Ἁρμαγεδών is for
ἁρμαμεγεδων, compounded of
חרמא destruction, and
מגדון. (Wieseler (Zur Gesch. d. N. T. Schrift, p. 188), Hitzig (in Hilgenf. Einl., p. 440 n.), others, revive the derivation (cf. Hiller, Simonis, others) from
מְגִדּו עָר city of Megiddo.)
STRONGS NT 717: Μαγεδων [Μαγεδων (Revelation 16:16 WH), see Ἀρμαγεδον.]