Steel
In all cases were the word “steel” occurs in the Authorized Version the true rendering of the Hebrew is “copper.” Whether
the ancient Hebrews were acquainted with steel is not perfectly certain. It has been inferred from a passage in (Jeremiah 15:12) that the “iron from the north” there spoken of denoted a superior kind of metal, hardened in an unusual manner, like the
steel obtained from the Chalybes of the Pontus, the iron smiths of the ancient world. The hardening of iron for cutting instruments
was practiced in Pontus, Lydia and Laconia. There is, however, a word in hebrew, paldah, which occurs only in (Nahum 2:3) (4) and is there rendered “torches,” but which most probably denotes steel or hardened iron, and refers to the flashing
scythes of the Assyrian chariots. Steel appears to have been known to the Egyptians. The steel weapons in the tomb of Rameses
III., says Wilkinson, are painted blue, the bronze red.