effusion of blood
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary
EPHES-DAMMIM.?The place in Judah where the Philistines were encamped at the time when David slew Goliath (1Sa_17:1). The same name appears in 1Ch_11:13 as Pas-Dammim.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909
E'phes-dam'mim. (cessation of blood-shed). A place between Socoh and Arekah, at which the Philistines were encamped before the affray, in which Goliath was killed. 1Sa_17:1. Under the shorter form of Pas-Dammim, it occurs once again in a similar connection. 1Ch_11:13.
Smith's Bible Dictionary
By Dr. William Smith.Published in 1863
ē-fes-dam?im (אפס דּמּים, 'epheṣ dammı̄m): Some spot between Socoh and Azekah (1Sa_17:1) where the Philistines were encamped; called in 1Ch_11:13, ?Pas-dammin.? Ephes? end of? or ?boundary? and the whole word may mean the ?boundary of blood.? The deep red color of the newly plowed earth in this situation is noticeable and may have given origin to the idea of ?blood? (compare ADAMMIM). Cheyne suggests that from אדמים, 'ădhummı̄m, to דמים, dammı̄m, is an easy step, and that the former, meaning ?red brown earth,? may have been the original. No other satisfactory locality has been found to explain the name or fix the site.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.
Ephes-dammim
(Heb. E'phes Dammim', דִּמַּים אֶפֶס, appar. boundary of blood; Sept. Α᾿φεσδομίν or Α᾿φεσδομμείν v.r. Ε᾿φερμόν, Vulg. fines Dommin), a place in the tribe of Judah between Shochoh and Azekah, where the Philistines were encamped when David fought with Goliath (1Sa_17:1). The similar, but not parallel passage (1Ch_11:13), has the shorter form Pas-Dammim. The name was probably derived from its being the scene of frequent sanguinary encounters between Israel and the Philistines. On his way from Beit-Jibrin to Jerusalem, Van de Velde came past a ruined site on the high northward-looking brow of wady Musur, about one hour E. by S. of Beit-Netif, called Khirbet Damun, which he has no doubt represents the ancient Ephes-Dammim, and "which fixes the place of the camp of Goliath just at its foot, where the valley contracts, and may, indeed, be called the pass [or extremity] of Dammim" (Memoir, page 290). In that case the narrative of 1Sa_17:1-58, becomes plain: "the gorge" (הִגִּיְא) between the battle-lines of the two armies (1Sa_17:3), and along which the first rout and pursuit occurred (1Sa_17:52), was no other than the wady Musur itself, which is so narrow immediately at this spot. SEE ELAH (VALLEY OF).
CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.