Shamgar (Easton)
DIC dictionary-entry · status:draft · license:PD
The Philistines from the maritime plain had made incursions into the Hebrew upland for the purposes of plunder, when one of this name, the son of Anath, otherwise unknown, headed a rising for the purpose of freeing the land from this oppression. He repelled the invasion, slaying 600 men with an "ox goad" (q.v.). The goad was a formidable sharpointed instrument, sometimes ten feet long. He was probably contemporary for a time with Deborah and Barak ( Judges 3:31 ; 5:6 ).
Source
- part_of
source-manifest/easton— Easton's Bible Dictionary (PD)