Gerar ( Gərār, "lodging-place") was a Philistine town and district in what is today south central Israel, mentioned in the Book of Genesis and in the Second Book of Chronicles of the Hebrew Bible.
Some older commentaries, such as Smith's Bible Dictionary,Smith's Bible Dictionary published 1884 stated simply that Gerar was located "south of Gaza". Also, a ninth century rabbinical source, Saadia Gaon, identified Gerar with Haluza, which is located along the Besor Stream in the Negev.Rabbi Saadia Gaon's Tafsīr ( = al-Khalūṣ) in the Pentateuch ( Tafsir), s.v. Genesis 10:19, Genesis 20:2, Genesis 26:17, 20.On Haluza's proximity to Gerar, see: M. Naor, Gerar — Tell el Far'a, Bulletin of the Israel Exploration Society (1955), pp. 99–102 (Hebrew) However, according to recent archaeological research, Haluza only dates to the period of the Nabataean Kingdom.
The Haggadah identifies the two references to Abimelech as two separate people, the second being the first Abimelech's son, and that his original name was Benmelech "son, but he changed his name to his father's, meaning "my father is king".
In 2 Chronicles 14:12-15, Gerar and its surrounding towns figure in the account of King Asa's defeat of Zerah's vast Cushite forces.
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