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Read the Bible
1 Kings 4:22
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- BridgewayEncyclopedias:
- CondensedContextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
provision: Heb. bread
measures: Heb. cors, 1 Kings 4:22
Reciprocal: 1 Samuel 8:12 - and will set 1 Kings 5:11 - measures 1 Kings 10:5 - the meat 1 Kings 12:4 - our yoke 2 Chronicles 9:4 - the meat Nehemiah 5:18 - Now that Proverbs 24:4 - General Ecclesiastes 5:11 - they Isaiah 3:7 - neither bread Daniel 1:5 - a daily
Cross-References
This is the offering which you shall take from them: gold, silver, brass,
And this is the offering which ye shall take of them; gold, and silver, and brass,
And this is the contribution that you will receive from them—gold and silver and bronze,
These are the gifts that you should receive from them: gold, silver, bronze;
This is the offering you are to accept from them: gold, silver, bronze,
"This is the offering you are to receive from them: gold, silver, and bronze,
"This is the contribution which you are to take from them: gold, silver, and bronze,
And this is the offring which ye shal take of them, golde, and siluer, and brasse,
And this is the contribution which you shall take from them: gold, silver, and bronze,
Here is a list of what you are to collect: Gold, silver, and bronze;
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And Solomon's provision for one day was thirty measures of fine flour,.... The measure here used was the "corus", or "cor", the same with the homer, which was equal to ten ephahs, and, according to Bishop Cumberland w, held seventy five wine gallons and five pints, and somewhat more; by which may be known how many gallons of fine flour these thirty measures held, which were all consumed in one day:
and threescore measures of meal: sixty measures of a coarser sort, for the servants, not so finely dressed; the same measure is here used as before; and it is observed by some, that one cor is equivalent to six hundred forty eight Roman pounds, and allowing to one man two pounds a day for his food, there would be food enough for 29,160 men out of 90 times 648, or 58,320 pounds x. Others exaggerate the account; Vilalpandus says it would have sufficed 48,600 persons; Seth Calvisius 54,000, and Salianus 70,000 y; the Jews say z that he had 60,000 that ate at his table; that is, who were maintained at his court.
w Scripture Weights and Measures, ch. 3. p. 86. x Vid. Scheuchzer. Physic. Sacr. p. 516. y Vid. Witsii Miscellan. tom. 2. exercit. 10. sect. 26. z Shalshalet Hakabala, fol. 8. 2.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Thirty measures - (margin, cors) The cor, which was the same measure as the homer, is computed, on the authority of Josephus, at 86 English gallons, on the authority of the rabbinical writers at 44. Thirty cors, even at the lower estimate, would equal 1,320 gallons, or 33 of our “sacks;” and the 90 cors of fine and coarse flour would altogether equal 99 sacks. From the quantity of flour consumed, it has been conjectured that the number of those who fed at the royal board was 14,000.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse 1 Kings 4:22. Solomon's provision for one day: -
Of fine flour . . . . . . 30 measures, or cors.
Of meal . . . . . . . . . 60 ditto.
Stall-fed oxen. . . . . . 10
Ditto from the pasture. . 20
Sheep . . . . . . . . . . 100; with harts, roebucks, fallow deer, and fat fowls.
The כר cor was the same as the homer, and contained nearly seventy-six gallons, wine measure, according to Bishop Cumberland.
Sheep — צאן tson, comprehending both sheep and goats.
Harts — מאיל meaiyal, the deer.
Roebucks — צבי tsebi, the gazal, antelope, or wild goat.
Fallow deer — יחמור yachmur, the buffalo. See the notes on Deuteronomy 12:15; Deuteronomy 14:5.
Fatted fowl. — ברברים אבוסים barburim abusim, I suppose, means all the wild fowls in season during each month. Michaelis derives barburim from ברא bara, which in Chaldee, Syriac, and Arabic, signifies a field, a desert; all that is without the cities and habitations of men: hence חיות ברא cheyvath bara, wild beasts, Daniel 2:38, תור בר tor bar, wild bull; and therefore barburim may signify creatures living in the fields, woods, and deserts, which are taken by hunting, and opposed to those which are domesticated; and, consequently, may include beasts as well as fowls. Many have translated the word capons; but, query, was any such thing known among the ancient Jews? Solomon's table, therefore, was spread with all the necessaries and delicacies which the house or the field could afford.
But how immense must the number of men have been who were fed daily at the palace of the Israelitish king! Vilalpandus computes the number to be not less than forty-eight thousand, six hundred; and Calvisius makes, by estimation from the consumption of food, fifty-four thousand! These must have included all his guards, each of whom received a ration from the king's store.