Hamath
(fortress), the principal city of upper Syria, was situated in the valley of the Orontes, which it commanded from the low
screen of hills which forms the water-shed between the source of the Orontes and Antioch. The Hamathites were a Hamitic race,
and are included among the descendants of Canaan. (Genesis 10:18) Nothing appears of the power of Hamath until the time of David. (2 Samuel 8:9) Hamath seems clearly to have been included in the dominions of Solomon. (1 Kings 4:21-24) The “store-cities” which Solomon “built in Hamath,” (2 Chronicles 8:4) were perhaps staples for trade. In the Assyrian inscriptions of the time of Ahab (B.C. 900) Hamath appears as a separate
power, in alliance with the Syrians of Damascus, the Hittites and the Phoenicians. About three-quarters of a century later
Jeroboam the Second “recovered Hamath.” (2 Kings 14:28) Soon afterwards the Assyrians took it, (2 Kings 18:34; 19:13) etc., and from this time it ceased to be a place of much importance. Antiochus Epiphanes changed its name to Epiphaneia.
The natives, however, called it Hamath even in St. Jerome’s time, and its present name, Hamah, is but slightly altered from
the ancient form.