Philistia
(Heb. Pelesheth) (land of sojourners). The word thus translated (in) (Psalms 60:8; 87:4; 108:9) is in the original identical with that elsewhere rendered Palestine, which always means land of the Philistines. (Philistia
was the plain on the southwest coast of Palestine. It was 40 miles long on the coast of the Mediterranean between Gerar and
Joppa, and 10 miles wide at the northern end and 20 at the southern.—ED.) This plain has been in all ages remarkable for the
extreme richness of its soil. It was also adapted to the growth of military power; for while the itself permitted. the use
of war-chariots, which were the chief arm of offence, the occasional elevations which rise out of it offered secure sites
for towns and strongholds. It was, moreover, a commercial country: from its position it must have been at all times the great
thoroughfare between Phoenicia and Syria in the north and Egypt and Arabia in the south.