Heb.
maginnim, shields, evidently smaller than the
sinnah (
v. 15). There is a suggestion that the royal bodyguard in later years comprised 500 men in the fact that 5
“captains of hundreds” are mentioned who were presumably in command of the palace guards (
ch. 23:1). That these guards were divided into two groups, one of 200 men and another of 300 men, is hinted in
2 Kings 11:5-7, 9, 10, where three parts, or companies, are named as those
“that enter in on the sabbath,” or were on guard on the Sabbath, and two were those
“that go forth on the sabbath.” If these deductions are correct, the 200
“targets” and the 300
“shields” may have been worn by the royal bodyguard at certain state functions. Solomon’s personal bodyguard is described as consisting of 60 men on a particular occasion when the king’s litter was carried through the streets of Jerusalem in magnificent display (
S. of Sol. 3:7-10, margin).