Naioth
From BibleEncyclopedia.Net
Dwellings, the name given to the prophetical college established by Samuel near Ramah. It consisted of a cluster of separate dwellings, and hence its name. David took refuge here when he fled from Saul (1 Samuel 19:18, 1 Samuel 19:19, 1 Samuel 19:22, 1 Samuel 19:23), and here he passed a few weeks in peace (Compare Psalm 11:1-7). It was probably the common residence of the “sons of the prophets.”
nā´yoth, nī´ōth (ניות, nāyōth; Codex Vaticanus Αὐάθ, Auáth; Codex Alexandrinus Ναυιώθ, Nauiṓth):
This is the name given to a place in Ramah to which David went with Samuel when he fled and escaped from Saul (1Sa_19:18, etc.). The term has often been taken as meaning “houses” or “habitations”; but this cannot be justified. There is no certainty as to exactly what the word signified. Clearly, however, it attached to a particular locality in Ramah; and whatever its etymological significance, it denoted a place where the prophets dwelt together. On approaching it in pursuit of David, Saul was overcome by the Spirit of God, and conducted himself like one “possessed,” giving rise to the proverb, “Is Saul also among the prophets?”
