16. Gibeah. The Hebrew here reads Geba, not Gibeah as in 15. Geba was directly across the wadi from Michmash (see 14:4, 5, where Geba, not Gibeah, is in the original of 5). The confusion in the translation probably arose from the opinion that Geba and Gibeah were only variant spellings of the same place, as older maps still show. It is true that Geba is sometimes called Gibeah, but there seem to have been two places (see on 14:16). If recent excavations, in addition to other Bible clues, have correctly placed Saul’s stronghold at Tell el-FÅ«l, 3 (5 ) southwest of Geba and directly north of Jerusalem (see I, 124), Jonathan did not go there, but evidently “abode in” Geba, across from Michmash, as here implied, after he took it from the Philistines ( 3), and Saul probably joined him after returning from Gilgal.