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English Dictionary: Absalom by the DICT Development Group
2 results for Absalom
From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:
   Absalom
      father of peace; i.e., "peaceful" David's son by Maacah (2 Sam.
      3:3; comp. 1 Kings 1:6). He was noted for his personal beauty
      and for the extra-ordinary profusion of the hair of his head (2
      Sam. 14:25,26). The first public act of his life was the
      blood-revenge he executed against Amnon, David's eldest son, who
      had basely wronged Absalom's sister Tamar. This revenge was
      executed at the time of the festivities connected with a great
      sheep-shearing at Baal-hazor. David's other sons fled from the
      place in horror, and brought the tidings of the death of Amnon
      to Jerusalem. Alarmed for the consequences of the act, Absalom
      fled to his grandfather at Geshur, and there abode for three
      years (2 Sam. 3:3; 13:23-38).
     
         David mourned his absent son, now branded with the guilt of
      fratricide. As the result of a stratagem carried out by a woman
      of Tekoah, Joab received David's sanction to invite Absalom back
      to Jerusalem. He returned accordingly, but two years elapsed
      before his father admitted him into his presence (2 Sam. 14:28).
      Absalom was now probably the oldest surviving son of David, and
      as he was of royal descent by his mother as well as by his
      father, he began to aspire to the throne. His pretensions were
      favoured by the people. By many arts he gained their affection;
      and after his return from Geshur (2 Sam. 15:7; marg., R.V.) he
      went up to Hebron, the old capital of Judah, along with a great
      body of the people, and there proclaimed himself king. The
      revolt was so successful that David found it necessary to quit
      Jerusalem and flee to Mahanaim, beyond Jordan; where upon
      Absalom returned to Jerusalem and took possession of the throne
      without opposition. Ahithophel, who had been David's chief
      counsellor, deserted him and joined Absalom, whose chief
      counsellor he now became. Hushai also joined Absalom, but only
      for the purpose of trying to counteract the counsels of
      Ahithophel, and so to advantage David's cause. He was so far
      successful that by his advice, which was preferred to that of
      Ahithophel, Absalom delayed to march an army against his father,
      who thus gained time to prepare for the defence.
     
         Absalom at length marched out against his father, whose army,
      under the command of Joab, he encountered on the borders of the
      forest of Ephraim. Twenty thousand of Absalom's army were slain
      in that fatal battle, and the rest fled. Absalom fled on a swift
      mule; but his long flowing hair, or more probably his head, was
      caught in the bough of an oak, and there he was left suspended
      till Joab came up and pierced him through with three darts. His
      body was then taken down and cast into a pit dug in the forest,
      and a heap of stones was raised over his grave. When the tidings
      of the result of that battle were brought to David, as he sat
      impatiently at the gate of Mahanaim, and he was told that
      Absalom had been slain, he gave way to the bitter lamentation:
      "O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! would God I had died
      for thee, O Absalom, my son, my son!" (2 Sam. 18:33. Comp. Ex.
      32:32; Rom. 9:3).
     
         Absalom's three sons (2 Sam. 14:27; comp. 18:18) had all died
      before him, so that he left only a daughter, Tamar, who became
      the grandmother of Abijah.
     

From Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's) [hitchcock]:
   Absalom, father of peace
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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