It was near the walls of Jerusalem, "by the entry of the gate Harsith" (
Jer 19:2); the Valley Gate opened into it (
Ne 2:13;
3:13). The boundary between Judah and Benjamin ran along it (
Jos 15:8;
18:16). It was the scene of idolatrous practices in the days of Ahaz (
2Ch 28:3) and of Manasseh, who "made his children to pass through the fire in the valley of the son of Hinnom" (
2Ch 33:6), but Josiah in the course of his reforms "defiled Topheth, which is in the valley of the children (margin "son") of Hinnom, that no man might make his son or his daughter to pass through the fire to Molech"
(
2Ki 23:10). It was on account of these evil practices that Jeremiah (7:32; 19:6) announced the change of name. Into this valley dead bodies were probably cast to be consumed by the dogs, as is done in the Wady er-Rababi today, and fires were here kept burning to consume the rubbish of the city. Such associations led to the Ge-Hinnom (New Testament "Gehenna") becoming the "type of Hell" (Milton, Paradise Lost, i, 405).