Biblica Analytica
H1662 Hebrew

גַּת הַחֵ֫פֶר

gat-ha.che.pher

Gath-hepher

Lexicon Entry

Definition
Gath-hepher
Transliteration
gat-ha.che.pher
Strong's Number
H1662
Occurrences
4

Lexicon data from STEPBible TIPNR, Tyndale House, Cambridge. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

What Original Readers Understood

Supported

# Gath-hepher: A Biblical Place Name Gath-hepher is a Hebrew place name appearing four times in the biblical text. The term combines two elements: *gat* (a winepress or vat) and *hepher* (possibly meaning "well" or "pit"), suggesting a location associated with wine production or water storage facilities. As a proper noun denoting a specific geographical location, it functioned as a settlement identifier in ancient Israel. The limited frequency of occurrence—just four biblical mentions—indicates that Gath-hepher was a relatively minor settlement compared to major urban centers. Its presence across multiple biblical texts nonetheless confirms its existence as a recognized place within the geographical and administrative landscape of ancient Israel. The name's preservation in scripture suggests the location held sufficient importance to warrant repeated reference, though the biblical record provides minimal detail about its role or significance in Israelite life and history.

Source data & methodology
Strong's
H1662
Lemma
גַּת הַחֵ֫פֶר
Transliteration
gat-ha.che.pher
Definition
Gath-hepher
Occurrences
4
Model
claude-haiku-4-5-20251001
Prompt version
1

AI synthesis uses only the lexicon data above as context — never training knowledge.

Occurrences in Scripture

4 total occurrences across the text