After the conquest, as we have seen, Gilead passed mainly into the hands of Gad. An Ammonite attack was repulsed by the prowess of Jephthah (Jud 11:1 ); and the spite of the Ephraimites was terribly punished (Jud 12:1 ). Gilead at first favored the cause of Ishbosheth (
2Sa 2:9), but after the murder of that prince the Gileadites came with the rest of Israel to David (
2Sa 5:1). By the conquest of the fortress Rabbah, which the Ammonites had continued to hold, the land passed finally under the power of David (
2Sa 12:26 ). David fled to Mahanaim from Absalom, and that rebel prince perished in one of the forests of Gilead (
2Sa 17:24;
18:6 ). Joab's census included Gilead (
2Sa 24:6). Solomon had two commissariat districts in Gilead (
1Ki 4:13 f,
19). Before Ramoth-gilead, which he sought to win back from the Syrians who had captured it, Ahab received his death wound (
1Ki 22:1 ). The Syrians asserted their supremacy in Gilead (
2Ki 10:32 f) where Moab and Israel had contended with varying fortune (M S). At length Tiglath-pileser overran the country and transported many of the inhabitants (
2Ki 15:29). This seems to have led to a reconquest of the land by heathenism, and return to Gilead was promised to Israel (
Zec 10:10).