GAAL h.n miscarriage ; Sept. PacEX), son of Ebed. He went to Shechem with his brothers when the inhabitants became discontented with Abimelech, and so enga,ed their confidence that they placed him at theirhead. At the festival at which the Shechernites offered the first-fruits of their vintage in the temple of Baal, Gaal, by ap parently dninken bravadoes, roused the valour of the people, and strove yet more to kindle their wrath against the absent Abimelech. It would seem as if the natives had buen in some way inti mately connected with, or descended from, the oiiginal inhabitants ; for Gaal endeavoured to awaken their attachment to the ancient family of Hamor, the father of Shechem, which ruled the place in the time of Abraham (Gen. xxxiv. 2, 6), and which seems to have been at this time repre sented by Gaal and his brothers. Although de prived of Sheclaem, the family appears to have maintained itself in some power in the neighbour hood ; which induced the Shechemites to look to Gaal when they became tired of Abimelech.
Whether he succeeded in awakening among them a kind feeling towards the descendants of the an cient masters of the place, does not appear ; but eventually they went out under his command, and assisted doubtless by his men, to intercept and give battle to Abimelech, when he appeared before the town. He, however, fled before Abimelech, and his retreat into Shechcm being cut off by Zebul, the commandant of that place, he went to his home, and we hear of him no more. The account of this attempt is interesting, chiefly from the slight glimpse it affords of the position, at this period, of what had been one of the reigning families of the land before its invasion by the Israelites (Judg. ix. 26-48) B.C. 1026. -j. K.