the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
free while helping to build churches and support pastors in Uganda.
Click here to learn more!
Bible Encyclopedias
Fuller
The 1901 Jewish Encyclopedia
A cloth-finisher or -cleaner. The Hebrew term is (Malachi 3:2) or (2 Kings 18:17; Isaiah 7:3, 36:3), denoting one engaged in either of two occupations: (1) the cleaning of soiled garments or cloth, and (2) the finishing of newly woven cloth.
- The cleansing of cloth or garments may have developed into a distinct trade at an early time, as the operation involved too much work and consumed too much time (for colored materials one day; for white garments three days) to be done at home. The soiled garments were soaked in water to which various soapy, corrosive substances (such as alkaline salts) were added. Then they were stamped with the feet or beaten with wooden billets. This work is referred to in Malachi 3:2 and Mark 9:3, where the term might be rendered "washer."
- In order to remove the fatty particles adhering to newly woven cloth, and especially the matted wool entangled therein, and to give the fabric firmness and proper texture, it was steeped in hot water and then stamped and worked over with the fulling-billet. The cloth had to be scraped repeatedly during the process, and the wool evenly trimmed off.
Fuller's Field:
On account of the offensive smells attending the business, the fullers' shops were located outside of the city in the vicinity of large ponds or springs, where the water-supply was abundant, the cisterns within the city being reserved for domestic use. The "fuller's field" of Jerusalem (Isaiah 7:3, 36:2 = 2 Kings 18:17: ) is described as near the "upper pool." The site is a moot point. In any case it was, like the pool itself, near the wall (Isaiah 36:2; comp. ib. 5:11). Here Sennacherib's ambassadors stopped on their way from Lachish (ib.). Hence a spot west of the city, in the Birkat Mamilla, corresponding perhaps to Josephus' "snake pool," has been assumed for the location of the pool and the field. But this is too far from the wall. Stade ("Geschichte des Volkes Israel," 1:592) places the pool to the southeast of the city; but this conflicts with Isaiah 7:3, which points to a site to the north or northwest of Jerusalem. Josephus ("B. J." 5:4, § 2) mentions a "fuller's monument" near the northeast corner of the third wall. Compare Jerusalem.
These files are public domain.
Singer, Isidore, Ph.D, Projector and Managing Editor. Entry for 'Fuller'. 1901 The Jewish Encyclopedia. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​tje/​f/fuller.html. 1901.