"Topheth" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
A Hebrew word. Topheth is a word from the Hebrew Bible, specifically in the Old Testament. It refers to a place where child sacrifices, including infanticide, were offered to the god Moloch in ancient times. The word is often used metaphorically to describe a place of torture, suffering, or despair.
To be at or near the top; upstairs.<br><br>Example: "He went up to the top floor, then came straight down to the bottom floor again."
A tophet refers to a type of ancient Judean site, specifically a shared burial place for infants and children, frequently discovered with a significant number of urns, indicating multiple inhumations (burials) within a contained area, often with associated ritual or ceremonial artifacts. These tophets dated from the Kingdom of Judah and the Babylonian exile period, c. 8th - 6th centuries BCE. The term also includes charnel houses or other similar burial sites, but the name "tophet" has come to be most closely associated with the particular Judean burial grounds. The best-known example of such a tophet exists at Aiy and other Phoenicon, but, one from Pompeii and Delos is notable, among others.