Joshua Chapter 19 verse 31 Holy Bible

ASV Joshua 19:31

This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Asher according to their families, these cities with their villages.
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BBE Joshua 19:31

This is the heritage of the tribe of the children of Asher by their families, these towns with their unwalled places.
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DARBY Joshua 19:31

This was the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Asher according to their families, these cities and their hamlets.
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KJV Joshua 19:31

This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Asher according to their families, these cities with their villages.
read chapter 19 in KJV

WBT Joshua 19:31

This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Asher according to their families, these cities with their villages.
read chapter 19 in WBT

WEB Joshua 19:31

This is the inheritance of the tribe of the children of Asher according to their families, these cities with their villages.
read chapter 19 in WEB

YLT Joshua 19:31

This `is' the inheritance of the tribe of the sons of Asher, for their families, these cities and their villages.
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 31. - This is the inheritance of the tribe of Asher. Asher appears to have been allotted a long but narrow strip of territory between Naphtali and the sea. The natural advantages of the territory must have been great. Not only was it described prophetically by Jacob (Genesis 49:20) and by Moses (Deuteronomy 33:24, 25), but the prosperity of the two great maritime cities of Tyro and Sidon was due to the immense commercial advantages the neighbourhood afforded. St. Jean d'Acre, within the territory once assigned to Asher, has inherited the prosperity, so far as anything under the Turkish rule can be prosperous, once enjoyed by her two predecessors. Maundrell, the acute English chaplain at Aleppo, who visited Palestine in 1696, describes the plain of Acre in his day as about six hours' journey from north to south, and two from west to east; as being well watered, and possessing "everything else that might render it both pleasant and fruitful. But," he adds, "this delicious plain is now almost desolate, being suffered, for want of culture, to run up to rank weeds, as high as our horses' backs." Asher, however, never employed the advantages its situation offered. They never subdued the Canaanites around them, but, unquestionably at a very early date (see Judges 5:17) preferred a life of compromise and ignoble ease to the national welfare. But it would be incorrect to suppose that because the tribe is omitted in the list of rulers given in 1 Chronicles 27, it had ceased to be a power in Israel. For Gad is also omitted in that list, while among the warriors who came to greet David when he became undisputed king of Israel, Asher sent 40,000 trained warriors, a number exceeding the men of Ephraim, and those of Simeon, of Dan, and of the half tribe of Manasseh (see 1 Chronicles 12.), and far exceeding the numbers of Benjamin, which had never recovered the war of almost extermination waged against it, in consequence of the atrocity at Gibeah (Judges 20.). Possibly the reason why so few are mentioned of the tribe of Judah on that occasion is because so many were already with David. There seems no ground for the idea of Dean Stanley, that the allusion to Asher in Judges 5:17 is any more contemptuous than the allusion to any other tribe.

Ellicott's Commentary