Topheth
and once To’phet (place of burning), was in the southeast extremity of the “valley of the son of Hinnom,” (Jeremiah 7:31) which is “by the entry of the east gate.” (Jeremiah 19:2) The locality of Hinnom is to have been elsewhere. [Hinnom] It seems also to have been part of the king’s gardens, and watered by Siloam, perhaps a little to the south of the present
Birket el-Hamra . The name Tophet occurs only in the Old Testament. (2 Kings 23:10; Isaiah 30:33; Jeremiah 7:31,32; 19:6,11,12,13,14) The New does not refer to it, nor the Apocrypha. Tophet has been variously translated. The most natural meaning seems that
suggested by the occurrence of the word in two consecutive verses, in one of which it is a tabret and in the other Tophet.
(Isaiah 30:32,37) The Hebrew words are nearly identical; and Tophet war probably the king’s “music-grove” or garden, denoting originally nothing
evil or hateful. Certainly there is no proof that it took its name from the beaten to drown the cries of the burning victims
that passed through the fire to Molech. Afterward it was defiled by idols and polluted by the sacrifices of Baal and the fires
of Molech. Then it became the place of abomination, the very gate or pit of hell. The pious kings defiled it and threw down
its altars and high places, pouring into it all the filth of the city, till it became the “abhorrence” of Jerusalem.