2. Others, again, of the sons of Korah were "porters," i.e. doorkeepers, in the Temple, an office of considerable dignity. In 1Ch_9:17-19, we learn that Shallim, a Korahite of the line of Ebiasaph, was chief of the doorkeepers, and that he and his brethren were over the works of the service, keepers of the gates of the tabernacle (compare 2Ki_25:18) apparently about the time of the Babylonian captivity. See also 1Ch_9:22-29; Jer_35:4; and Ezr_2:42. But in 1 Chronicles 26 we find that this official station of the Korahites dated from the time of David, and that their chief was then Shelemiah or Meshelemiah, the son of (Abi)asaph, to whose custody the east gate fell by lot, being the principal entrance. Shelemiah is thought to have been the same as Shallum in 1Ch_9:17, and perhaps Meshullam, 2Ch_24:12; Neh_12:25, where, as in so many other places, a name may designate, not the individuals. but the house or family. In 2Ch_21:14, Kore, the son of Imnah the Levite, the doorkeeper towards the east, who was over the free-will offerings of God to distribute the oblations of the Lord and the most holy things, was probably a Korahite, as we find the name Kore in the family of Korah in 1Ch_9:19. In 1Ch_9:31 we find that Maattithiah, the first-born of Shallum the Korahite, had the set office over the things that were made in the pans. SEE LEVITE.