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List of minor biblical places

This is a list of places mentioned in the Bible, which do not have their own Wikipedia articles. See also the list of biblical places for locations which do have their own article.

A edit

Abana edit

Abana, according to 2 Kings 5:12, was one of the "rivers of Damascus", along with the Pharpar river.[1]

Abdon edit

Abdon was a Levitical city in Asher allocated to the Gershonites according to Joshua 21:30 and 1 Chronicles 6:74.[2]

Abel-Shittim edit

Abel-Shittim, the last Israelite encampment before crossing into the Promised Land, is identified by Josephus with Abila in Peraea, probably the site of modern Tell el-Hammam in Jordan.

Adam edit

Adam was a location which, according to Joshua 3:16, was along the Jordan River, near Zarethan.[3] According to Cheyne and Black, it may be a scribal error for "Adamah".[4]

Adadah edit

Adadah is the name of a town mentioned in Joshua 15:22, in a list of towns inside the territory of the Tribe of Judah.[5] The name "Adadah" appears nowhere else in the Bible.[6] According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica, the name "Adadah" may be a miswritten version of Ararah, a name equivalent to "Aroer".[6]

Addan edit

Addan or Addon is a Babylonian location mentioned in Ezra 2:59 and Nehemiah 7:61.

Adithaim edit

Adithaim, mentioned only in Joshua 15:30,[7] is listed among locations belonging to Judah in the Shephelah.[8]

Adria edit

Adria, mentioned in Acts 27:27,[9] is a term used for "the division of the Mediterranean which lies between Sicily and Malta on the West and Crete on the East".[10]

Aesora edit

Aesora (or Esora) is a location mentioned only in Judith 4:4.[11] The Book of Judith is considered canonical by some Christians, but not by Jews and most Protestants.

The Septuagint calls it Aisora, Arasousia, Aisoraa, or Assaron, depending on the manuscript.[12] The book of Judith places it between Choba and the Valley of Salem.[12] According to Cheyne and Black (1899), the exact location is uncertain.[12]

Aetan edit

Aetan appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua.[13][14]

Ahava edit

Ahava is the name of a canal or river mentioned in the Book of Ezra.[15][16] The location is unknown.[16] Albert Barnes says it was both a town and a river.[17]

Almon edit

Almon is a location mentioned in Joshua 21:18 given to the Kohathites,[18] and thought to be near the modern Israeli settlement at Almon, Mateh Binyamin in the West Bank.

Amad edit

Amad is a biblical place-name mentioned only in Joshua 19:26.[19][20] It appears in a list of locations that make up the borders of the territory assigned to the biblical Tribe of Asher.[20]

Amam edit

Amam (Hebrew: אמם, 'amam) is an unidentified site in the Negeb of Judah, near the border with Edom, mentioned in Joshua 15:26.[21][22]

Anaharath edit

Anaharath is described in Joshua 19:19 as a location on the border of the territory belonging to the Tribe of Issachar.[23] It was most likely located at the site now known as Tel Rekhesh[24]/Tell el-Mukharkhash in the Tabor Stream valley.

Arah of the Sidonians edit

Arah of the Sidonians is a place-name which appears in Joshua 13:4.[25] Other translations render the name Mearah.[26] The initial syllable me- here is commonly interpreted as a preposition, yielding the translation "from Arah" instead of "Mearah". The me- is also interpreted as "from" by Thomas Kelly Cheyne, although he additionally proposed that further scribal error had influenced the word.[27]

Arumah edit

Arumah is a location mentioned in Judges 9:41, as the place where Gideon's son Abimelech lived for a time. The location is generally considered to be the same as the modern Jebel el-Urmah.[28]

Ascent of Luhith edit

See Luhith.

Ashnah edit

Ashnah is the name given in Joshua 15 (verses 33 and 43) for two places in the Shephelah of Judah. For the first, the modern location Aslin has been proposed; for the second, Idna.[29]

Ataroth-addar edit

Ataroth-addar is a location mentioned in Joshua 16:5.[30] It may be the same location as the Ataroth mentioned in 16:2.[31]

Aznoth-tabor edit

Aznoth-tabor is the name of a place in the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali. It is probably the modern Khirbet el-Jebeil,[32] c. 3 miles north of Mount Tabor.

B edit

Beer edit

Beer was a location reached by the Israelites during their Exodus journey, mentioned in Numbers 21:16-18.[33] After the death of Aaron, the Israelites moved on, apparently at pace, through a series of locations along the Moabite/Amorite border. There was a well at Beer, where Moses was able to assemble and refresh the travelling community, and which was associated with a song regarding the Israelite leaders and 'the lawgiver' in providing water.

Another Beer (or Bera)[34] is mentioned in Judges 9:21 as the place to which Gideon's youngest son, Joatham or Jotham, fled to escape from Abimelech after his 69 brothers had been killed.[35] Matthew Poole described Beer as "a place remote from Shechem, and out of Abimelech's reach";[36] and the Pulpit Commentary suggests it is "either the same as Beeroth, among the heights of the tribe of Benjamin (Joshua 9:17), now El-Birch, 'the first halting-place for caravans on the northern road from Jerusalem' (Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Sinai and Palestine, p. 210); or a place called by Eusebius 'Beta', now El-Birch, eight Roman miles from Eleutheropolis (now Beit Jibrin), and possibly the same as the place of the same name described by Maundrell as four hours from Jerusalem, and two hours west of Bethel; or, as Ewald thinks, Beer beyond Jordan (Numbers 21:16 [see above])". The commentary concludes that "it is impossible to decide which, or whether any, of these is the place designated as Jotham's place of refuge.[37]

Beer-lahai-roi edit

Beer-lahai-roi or well of the Life which saw me is the name of a well in the Negev which is known for its appearance in a story in which God appears to Hagar.[38][39] Later the Book of Genesis claims that Isaac stayed near it.[40] Genesis locates this well in the wilderness of Beer-sheba,[41] "on the way to Shur ... between Kadesh and Bered".[42][38] Because the Beer in Beer-lahai-roi is simply the Hebrew word "well", the King James Version renders the whole expression "the well Lahairoi".

The biblical references to it may place it somewhere in the vicinity of the modern Bir 'Asluj.[43]

Beeroth edit

bȝ(j)rtw[44][45]
in hieroglyphs
Era: New Kingdom
(1550–1069 BC)

See Beeroth (biblical city).
Beeroth (Hebrew: בְּאֵרוֹת; in LXX Ancient Greek: Βηρωθ) is a minor city in Gibeon mentioned in Joshua 9:17. Maspero, Petrie, also Müller and Budge identify the place name Baertou mentioned in the Annals of Thutmose III at Temple of Karnak as biblical Beeroth.[44]

Beon edit

Beon is a location mentioned only in Numbers 32:3. It may be a copying error for "Meon".[46]

Bera edit

An alternative name for Beer.[47]

Bered edit

Bered is a location mentioned only in Genesis 16:14, which locates Hagar between Kadesh and Bered at the time of her meeting with an angel while pregnant.

Berothah edit

Berothah is a place mentioned in passing in Ezekiel 47:16.

Beth-Anath edit

A place mentioned in Judges 1:33 and situated in the tribal territory of Naphtali.[48]

Bethanath edit

Bethanath

Betharabah edit

Betharabah

Beth-aram edit

Beth-aram

Betharbel edit

Betharbel (Hosea 10:14)

Beth-aven edit

Beth-aven, in Hosea 4:15 It Is opposed to Beth-el[49][50]

Beth-azmaveth edit

Beth-azmaveth

Beth-barah edit

A place mentioned in Judges 7:24.[51]

Beth-birei edit

Beth-birei

Beth Car edit

Beth-car, Beth Car: The point to which the Israelites drove back the Philistines following their raid on the Israelite assembly convened by Samuel at Mizpah, recorded in 1 Samuel 7:5-12.[52]

Beth-diblathaim edit

Beth-diblathaim

Bethemek edit

Bethemek

Bether edit

Bether

Beth-ezal edit

Beth-ezal

Beth-gader edit

Beth-gader

Beth-gamul edit

Beth-gamul

Beth Jeshimoth edit

Beth Jeshimoth (Hebrew, Beit ha-Yeshimot) was a town in the Transjordan, which is mentioned in four verses of the Hebrew Bible: Numbers 33:49, Joshua 12:3 and 13:20, and Ezekiel 25:9. Numbers mentions it in a description of where the Israelites encamped during their wilderness journeys. According to Joshua 13:20, it was part of the land allocated to the Tribe of Reuben. Ezekiel 25:9 lists it as one of three cities which constitute "the glory of the country" of Moab, in a passage in which God promises to punish Moab. During the First Jewish-Roman War, Beth Jeshimoth (Bezemoth) was captured by the Roman Imperial army, and was used by them to resettle deserters who had joined the Roman ranks.[53]

The King James Version spells the name as Bethjesimoth and Bethjeshimoth. Classical Greek sources: Bezemoth.

Beth Jeshimoth is commonly identified with the village of Sweimeh in modern-day Jordan.[54]

Beth Lebaoth edit

Beth Lebaoth, Beth-lebaoth or Lebaoth is located in the Negev, and in territory which according to the Book of Joshua was assigned to the Tribe of Simeon.[55][56]

Beth-marcaboth edit

Beth-marcaboth

Beth-meon edit

Beth-meon

Beth-millo edit

Beth-millo, 2 Kings 12:21

Beth Pelet edit

Beth Pelet (spelled Bethpalet and Bethphelet in the King James Version) was a location in the territory assigned to the Tribe of Judah by Joshua 15:27, and was occupied by Judahites in Yehud Medinata following the return from the Babylonian captivity according to Nehemiah 11:26. Its location is not certain, but may have been along the southern edge of Judah near the border with Edom.[57]

Beth-pazzez edit

Beth-pazzez

Beth Peor edit

Beth Peor – also transliterated as Bethpeor (KJ21), Beth-peor (ASV), Beth-pe'or (RSV), Beit-P'or (CJB) or Phogar (Douai-Rheims Bible) – is, according to Deuteronomy 3:29 and Deuteronomy 4:46, the location "opposite which" the Israelites were camped after their victories over Sihon, king of the Amorites and Og, king of Bashan, after their captured lands were allocated to the tribes of Reuben, Gad and Manasseh,[58] and where Moses delivered his sermon summarizing covenant history and the Ten Commandments in the narrative of the book of Deuteronomy.[59][60]

Beth-phelet edit

Beth-phelet

Beth-rapha edit

Beth-rapha

Bohan edit

See Stone of Bohan.

C edit

Caleb-ephrathah edit

Caleb-ephrathah or Caleb-ephratah is a place mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 2:24, where it is said that Hezron died there.[61]

Camon edit

Camon, Kamon or Camoun was the place where the biblical judge Jair was buried (Judges 10:5). It was a city of Gilead according to Josephus, and in the opinion of the editors of the Pulpit Commentary: "Polybius mentions a Camoun among other trans-Jordanic places, but its site has not been verified by modern research".[62] However, Easton disagrees:

It has usually been supposed to have been a city of Gilead, on the east of Jordan.[63]

Carem edit

Carem appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua.[13][14]

Casiphia edit

Casiphia or Kasiphia is a place-name found only in Ezra 8:17, referring to an unknown location in Babylon.[64] Ezra is recorded as having gotten Levites from Casiphia in order to serve in the temple of Jerusalem.

Cave of Makkedah edit

See Makkedah.

Chephirah edit

See Chephirah.

Chezib edit

Chezib, a Canaanite village where the sons of Judah were born, thought to be Khirbet Ghazy; now a ruin.

Culon edit

Culon appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua.[13][14]

D edit

Diblah edit

Diblah (also called Diblath) is a place-name found in Ezekiel 6:14.[65] It is probably a variant form of the name Riblah.[66][67]

Dilean edit

Dilean is a place-name found in Joshua 15:38, in a list of locations allotted to the tribe of Judah in the Shephelah. The site is unknown, but from the position of the town in the list, it would appear to be somewhere north of Tel Lachish and Eglon.[68][69]

Dimonah edit

Dimonah is a place listed in Joshua 15:22 as being inside the territory of Judah along its southern border with Edom. It may be the same as Dibon.[70]

Dura edit

The "plain of Dura" is a location mentioned in Daniel 3:1, as the place where the king of Babylon built an image of himself. The location is uncertain, as there were several places named Dura in the region.[71]

E edit

Eglaim edit

Eglaim is a Moabite city mentioned by Isaiah in his proclamation against Moab (Isaiah 15:8). Its location is unknown.

Elealeh edit

Elealeh was a Moabite town. Every time it is mentioned in the Bible, Heshbon is mentioned as well.[72] The Book of Numbers assigns Elealeh to the Tribe of Reuben.[73] Thomas Kelly Cheyne believed that where the present Hebrew text of Isaiah 15:8 reads Beer Elim, the original likely read b- [Hebrew preposition "in"] Elealeh.[72] Today the location of the biblical Elealeh is called elʿAl.[74]

Eleph edit

Eleph is the name given in Joshua 18:28, apparently for a town in the territory of the Tribe of Benjamin. Because the name "Eleph" means thousand, and because the form found in Joshua is in Hebrew ha-eleph, literally "the thousand", Thomas Kelly Cheyne believed there was an error in the text, and that ha-eleph was a copyist's mistake for either Taralah or Irpeel.[75] Another understanding of the word is that it is part of a compound name for a town called Zela Haeleph, instead of "Zela" and "Eleph" being two distinct towns, as in the King James Version.[76] Conder and Kitchener identified Eleph with Lifta.[77]

Elon-beth-hanan edit

Elon-beth-hanan (sometimes written Elonbethhanan, Elonbeth-hanan, Elon Bethhanan, etc.) is apparently the name of a place recorded in 1 Kings 4:9. 1 Kings 4 asserts that Solomon, king of Israel, divided his kingdom into twelve administrative districts, each with a governor responsible for delivering taxation from the region to the king. The region assigned to a Ben-Deker is recorded as including Makaz, Shaalbim, Beth-shemesh, and Elon-beth-hanan. Instead of beth, some manuscripts read ben, the Hebrew word for "son of," yielding the reading "Elon son of Hanan."[78] Instead of "Elon-beth-hanan," the Septuagint reads "and Elon as far as Beth-hanan", a reading endorsed as "probably right" by the Encyclopaedia Biblica, although the Encyclopaedia expresses doubt as to whether "Beth-hanan" is correct.[78]

Elon-meonenim edit

See Meonenim.

Eltolad edit

Eltolad is a location in Canaan mentioned in the Book of Joshua. Joshua 15:30 considers it a part of the territory of Judah in the Negev along the southern border with Edom, but Joshua 19:4 treats it as part of the territory of the Tribe of Simeon. 1 Chronicles 4:29 refers to it as "Tolad."[79]

Enam edit

Enam, according to Joshua 15:34, was a town in the Shephelah of the Tribe of Judah. It may be the same location as the Enaim where, in the narrative found in the book of Genesis, Tamar seduced the patriarch Judah.[80][self-published source][81]

En-eglaim edit

En-eglaim (Eneglaim, En Eglaim) is a location mentioned in a vision of the prophet Ezekiel. According to his vision, the Dead Sea (a salty lake in which fish cannot live) would one day be filled with fresh water, and fishers would cast their nets "from Engedi to En-eglaim."[82] According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne (1899), a likely theory would be that the place referred to is near where the Jordan River empties into the Dead Sea, resulting in the freshwater fish washed into the Dead Sea dying of the excessive salt content and washing up dead on the beach. Cheyne suggested Ain Hajleh (Ain Hajlah) as a possible location, thinking that the Hebrew Eglaim might be a later version in a text which originally read "Hoglah," as in the place-name "Beth-hoglah."[82] At present the exact location is still unidentified, though proposals include Ain Hajlah, Ain Feshka, or Eglaim.[83]

En-gannim edit

En-gannim is the name of two towns mentioned in the Hebrew Bible.[84]

En-haddah edit

En-haddah is a town mentioned only once in the Bible, in Joshua 19:21, where it is assigned to the territory of the Tribe of Issachar. Due to its placement in a list of towns, it would appear to be close to En-gannim, which immediately precedes it.[85]

En-hakkore edit

En-hakkore is the name of a fountain, mentioned only in Judges 15:18-19. In the biblical narrative, Samson the Israelite hero is thirsty, and calls (kara) to God in fear that he will die of thirst. In response, God causes a spring to miraculously appear. Samson memorializes the incident by naming the spring En Hakkore, Hebrew for "spring of the caller." According to Encyclopaedia Biblica, the original etymology of En-hakkore is "spring of the partridge," while the meaning "spring of the caller" is a later legendary invention.[86]

Ephratha edit

Ephratha (Bethlehem); from the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua.[13][14]

Esek edit

Esek is the name of the first of two wells which, according to Genesis, were the object of an argument between Isaac and herdsmen from the Philistine city of Gerar.[87] The Hebrew form of the name as preserved in the Masoretic Text is Esek, while Greek Septuagint manuscripts have the forms Adikia or Sykophantia.

En-shemesh edit

En-shemesh, meaning "fountain of the sun", is the name of a place along the border between Judah and the Tribe of Benjamin, between Ein Rogel and Adummim.[88][89]

Eshan edit

Eshan (Eshean) is the name of a place in the hill-country of the territory of the Tribe of Judah.[90] The location has not been identified.[91]

Esora edit

Esora is the King James Bible and Revised Version spelling of "Aesora".[11] See Aesora.

Eth-kazin edit

Eth-kazin (KJV Ittah-kazin) is the name of a place along the border of the territory of the Tribe of Zebulun, according to Joshua 19:13.

Ezel edit

Ezel appears to be the name given to a cairn, rock or milestone in a biblical story concerning David and Jonathan (1 Samuel 20:19). David, the future king of Israel, is a close friend of Jonathan, the son of then-king Saul. Jonathan warns David that Saul may be seeking to kill him, and instructs David to flee. Jonathan instructs David to wait "at the rock Ezel" until Jonathan can understand Saul's intentions, which he will then signal to David so that David can know whether to flee or stay in Saul's court. According to some biblical critics, the word "Ezel" is not a proper noun in Hebrew, and is either a scribal mistake of some kind or a word which is not understood by biblical scholars.[92] The Revised Standard Version refers to it as "yonder stone heap".[93]

G edit

Galeed edit

Galeed, according to Genesis 31:47-48, is the name given by Jacob to the place where he and Laban reached a peace agreement. The name is Hebrew for "testimonial mound", and is a reference to the pile of stones erected by Jacob and Laban as a memorial, or "witness", of the agreement between the two relatives. Laban called the stone "Jegar-Sahadutha", the Aramaic equivalent of the Hebrew "Galeed".[94]

Gallim edit

Gallim is a biblical place-name. In the Masoretic Text of the Hebrew Bible, Gallim is the name of one location, while the Greek Septuagint contains two locations by that name.

In Isaiah 10:30, the village of Gallim is mentioned alongside Laishah (Tel Dan) and Anathoth, placing it somewhere north of Jerusalem.[95] Michal in 1 Samuel, best known for being the wife of David, was briefly the wife of Palti, son of Laish, a man identified as coming from Gallim.[96]

An additional Gallim (or Galem) is mentioned in the Septuagint text of 15:59a, which contains additional cities assigned to the tribe of Judah which are not recorded in the Masoretic Text.[95][97]

Gath-rimmon edit

Gath-rimmon, the Levitical city from Joshua 19:45, Joshua 21:25 and 1 Chronicles 6:69,[98] has been identified by Benjamin Mazar with Tel Gerisa.[99] Anson Rainey supported the notion that it is identical with Gittaim and is to be found at or near Ramla.[100]

Gebim edit

Gebim is a biblical place-name which appears only in Isaiah 10:31,[101] in which it is said that "the inhabitants of Gebim gather themselves to flee." The location of Gebim is unknown.[102]

Gederothaim edit

Gederothaim is a place-name which appears only in Joshua 15:36, in a list of locations possessed by the Tribe of Judah in the Shephelah.[103] Because it appears immediately after the mention of Gederah, some scholars have suggested that "Gederothaim" was introduced by a mistaken copying of the name "Gederah."[103]

Geliloth edit

Geliloth is a place-name mentioned in Joshua 18:17, where it describes a location along the boundaries of the territory assigned to the Tribe of Benjamin. The name means "stone-circles."[104]

Gibbar edit

Gibbar is a "district of Judah" mentioned in a list of returnees from the Babylonian captivity, where the list claims that 95 of the "sons [i.e. people] of Gibbar" returned.[105][106]

Ginath edit

For the possible place-name Ginath, see List of biblical figures § Ginath.

Gittaim edit

Gittaim is a place-name which appears several times in the Hebrew Bible. According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne, "there were probably several Gittaims".[107]

  • A town called Gittaim in the territory of the Tribe of Benjamin appears in Nehemiah 11:33.[108]
  • A town called Gittaim is where the Beerothites were accepted as resident aliens according to 2 Samuel 4:3.[109]
  • Based on readings found in the Greek Septuagint, Cheyne suggested that "Gittaim is also probably the name of a town in or near Edom", referred to in Genesis 36:35 and 1 Chronicles 1:46, where the Hebrew text now reads "Avith".[107] Anson Rainey also places "Gath/Gittaim/Gath-rimmon", clearly different from Gath of the Philistines, at or near Ramla.[100]
  • In the Septuagint, 1 Samuel 14:33 contains a reference to a Gittaim (Greek geththaim),[110] although Cheyne believes the Septuagint's reading here to be a "manifest error".[107]

Gur-baal edit

Gur-baal is the name of a place mentioned in 2 Chronicles 26:7. According to the Chronicler, it was inhabited by "Arabians", and was the object of a successful attack by Uzziah, the king of Judah.

H edit

Habor edit

Habor is the biblical name for the Khabur River, which was in the wilderness of Judah, and mentioned in 2 Kings 17:6, 18:11.[111]

Hachilah edit

The Hill of Hachilah is a place in the wilderness of Judah.[112] It is mentioned in 1 Samuel 23:19, 26:1 as a place where David hid from Saul.[113]

Hadad-Rimmon edit

See Zechariah 12:11, Rummanah, Legio, Maximianopolis (Palestine), Hadad.

Hadashah edit




or




ḥwdjsꜣtꜣ(j) or ḥwdꜣsꜣṯ[114][115][116]
in hieroglyphs
Era: New Kingdom
(1550–1069 BC)

Hadashah (Hebrew: חֲדָשָׁה; in LXX Ancient Greek: Ἀδασὰν), mentioned only in once in the Bible in the Book of Joshua, was a city in the valley of Judah.[117][118] Its name means 'new'.[118] It is mentioned among the cities smitten by Ramesses III in his lists at the Temple of Karnak and the Mortuary Temple of Ramesses III at Medinet Habu as Houdasatha.[114][115][116]

Hali edit

Hali is mentioned only in Joshua 19:25, in a list of cities assigned to the Tribe of Asher.[119][120] Stanley Cook believed the name "Hali" may have been a scribal error for "Helbah."[120]

Hammath edit

Hammath was one of the fortified cities of Naphtali.[121]

Hammon edit

Hammon is the name of two places in the Hebrew Bible.[122] The first is along the borders of the Tribe of Asher.[123][122] The second is a Levitical city inside the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali, which is probably identical to Hammath and Hammoth-dor (1 Chronicles 6:76), or verse 61 in some Bibles.[122]

Hammoth-dor edit

Hammoth-dor was a Levitical city of Naphtali.[124] See Hammoth-dor.

Hamonah edit

Hamonah is a city mentioned in Ezekiel's apocalyptic prophecy, located, according to the text as it now stands, in the "Valley of Hamon-Gog."[125] Thomas Kelly Cheyne expressed doubt as to whether the text originally read "Hamonah," suggesting that scribal error may have obscured a more original reading.[126]

Hapharaim edit

Hapharaim or Haphraim is a town listed as being part of the territory of the Tribe of Issachar in the Book of Joshua.[127][128]

Hareth edit

Hareth or Hereth is a forested area in Judah to which David and his family return after leaving refuge in Moab, at the direction of the prophet Gad.[129] It is thought to have been somewhere on the border of the Philistine plain, in the southern part of Judah.[130]

Hazar-addar edit

Hazar-addar is a name which appears only in Numbers 34:4, where it refers to a location on the southern edge of the territory belonging to the Tribe of Judah. According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne, the original text of Joshua 15:3 probably contained a reference to the place city.[131]

Hazar-enan edit

Hazar-enan (sometimes spelled Hazar Enan or Hazarenan) is mentioned in Ezekiel 47:17 as a location along the northeastern edge of the land of Canaan according to Ezekiel's "ideal" borders.[132] The Aramaic Targum Jonathan ben Uzziel on Numbers 34:9–10 renders its translation as ṭirath ʿenawatha ("walled suburb of the springs"). According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica, Ezekiel 47:16 probably originally contained the name "Hazar-enan" where it now contains "Hazar-hatticon".[132]

Hazar-gaddah edit

Hazar-gaddah is a location listed in Joshua 15:27 as one of the cities along the southern border of Judah with Edom.[133]

Hazar-shual edit

Hazar-shual was a city in the territory of the Tribe of Simeon, along its border with Judah.[134][135]

Hazar-susah edit

Hazar-susah, also called Hazar-susim, is among the cities listed in the Book of Joshua as being part of the inheritance of the Tribe of Simeon.[136] It is mentioned only in Joshua 19:5 and 1 Chronicles 4:13.[136]

Hazer-hatticon edit

Hazer-hatticon is a location that appears on the northern border of the land of Canaan according to Ezekiel's idealized conception its borders.[137][138] According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica, the name is likely a miswritten form of Hazar-enan.[138]

Hazor-hadattah edit

Hazor-hadattah, Aramaic for "New Hazor," was a place mentioned in Joshua 15:25, on the border between Judah and the Edom.[139]

Heleph edit

Heleph, as the Masoretic Text now stands, appears to be the name of a place located in the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali.[140] It appears only in Joshua 19:33.[140] According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne, the verse appears to have undergone copying errors, and the word "Heleph" was probably not an original part of the verse.[140]

Helkath edit

Helkath (Hebrew: חֶלְקַת) is a location on the boundary of the tribe of Asher.[141]

Helkath-hazzurim edit

Helkath-hazzurim, a term which appears in 2 Samuel 2:16, is the name of a site where the troops of David fought the troops of Ish-bosheth. The location is described as "Helkath-hazzurim, which is in Gibeon," although Stanley A. Cook suggested that the words "which is in Gibeon" were a later explanatory note added to the text, and that the story may originally have been set in another location.[142]

Hena edit

Hena is the name of a place or nation mentioned only in a single speech in the Hebrew Bible, by the Rabshakeh, an official of Sennacharib, who mentioned it in threatening the Judahites in the time of king Hezekiah. The Rabshakeh warned the Israelites that his employer, the Assyrian Empire, would defeat the kingdom of Judah, and that the Israelites should not trust their deity to save them. He supported his argument by pointing to other places conquered by the Assyrians, and pointed out that the gods of those locations had not managed to prevent conquest. "Where is the king of Hamath, and the king of Arpad, and the king of the city of Sepharvaim, of Hena, and Ivvah?"[143] The locations of Hena and Ivvah are unknown to the present day.[144] Thomas Kelly Cheyne suggested that the name "Hena" has found its way into the verse "through a scribe's error."[145]

Hepher edit

Hepher is a place name found in the Hebrew Bible. In the conquest narratives of the Book of Joshua, there is a list of 31 kings defeated by the invading Israelites.[146] These kings are unnamed, but referred to simply in terms of what town they ruled, and a "king of Hepher" is listed among them in Joshua 12:17. Later, in the narratives about Solomon, Solomon divides his land into twelve districts, each ruled by a governor in charge of collecting tribute. The district assigned to the Ben-Hesed included "all the land of Hepher."[147] In addition to these explicit references to a place known as Hepher, there are veiled references to Hepher in etiological genealogical passages, in which historical regions and ethnic groupings are described as if descended from a family tree populated by individual forefathers.[148] In these narratives, a "person" named Hepher is described as being a descendant of Manasseh, indicating that Hepher was, at some point, ruled by people identified with the Tribe of Manasseh.[149][148] The people of Hepher are identified as "Hepherites" in Numbers 26:32.

The biblical mentions of Hepher are not enough to locate the town with any precision: it is not even certain whether Hepher is to be found in the Transjordan or in Cisjordan.[148]

Heshmon edit

Heshmon is the name of a town mentioned in Joshua 15:27, in a list of towns on the border between Judah and Edom. The name Heshmon may be the basis for the term Hasmonean (Hebrew hashmoni), as the Hasmoneans may have had their origin in Heshmon.[150]

Holon edit

Holon (Hilen, Hilez) is the name of two biblical towns.

  • A city in the hill-country of Judah according to Joshua 15:21 and Joshua 21:15,[151] but its site is unknown.[152] It is also referred to as Hilen or Hilez in 1 Chronicles 6:58 (verse 43 in some Bibles).[153]
  • A town in Moab, mentioned in Jeremiah 48:21 at the head of a list of towns to be "judged" by God for Moab's misdeeds.

Horem edit

Horem was one of the fortified cities of Naphtali according to Joshua 19:38.[154] The exact location is unknown.[155]

Hosah edit

ḫꜣṯꜣjj[156][157]
in hieroglyphs
Era: New Kingdom
(1550–1069 BC)

Hosah (Hebrew: חֹסָה), according to Joshua 19:29, was a city on the border between the Tribe of Asher and Tyre.[158] Where the Masoretic Text reads "Hosah," an important Greek Septuagint manuscript reads "Iaseif," leading to uncertainty about what the original reading was.[158] The location is unknown, but researchers are inclined towards Tell Rashidiyeh or Khirbet el-Hos,[159] today both in Lebanon, one S of Tyre,[160] the other South-East of it.[161]

Hukkok edit

Hukkok or Huquq was a town near Zebulun, on the border of Naphtali.[162] Many commentators have identified it with Yaquq.[163]

Humtah edit

Humtah was a city of Judah according to Joshua 15:54,[164] whose location has not been identified. Its name in Hebrew means 'snail'.

Hushah edit

Hushah was a place in the hill country of Judah founded by a son of Ezer (1 Chronicles 4:4). It is generally identified with Husan, south-west of Bethlehem.[165] One of David's Mighty Warriors is identified in the Bible as "Sibbecai the Hushathite."[166]

I edit

Idalah edit

Idalah is the name of a town in the territory of the Tribe of Zebulun according to Joshua 19:15, the only place in the Hebrew Bible where it is mentioned.[167]

Ijon edit



ˁȝˁjnȝ[168][169]
in hieroglyphs
Era: New Kingdom
(1550–1069 BC)

Ijon (Hebrew: עיּוֹן; in LXX Ancient Greek: Άίν) is the name of a place mentioned three times in the Hebrew Bible. In 1 Kings 15:20 and the parallel passage in 2 Chronicles 16:4, along with Dan and Abel-beth-maacah (Kings account, Chronicles reads "Abel-maim"), it is conquered by Ben-Hadad I of Aram during the time of Baasha of Israel (c.900 to c.877 BCE). In 2 Kings 15:29, Ijon along with Abel-beth-maacah and several other places are taken captive by Tiglath-Pileser III (reigned 745-727 BCE) during the reign of Pekah. It was slightly north of the modern-day site of Metula.[170] Budge and Paton equate Ijon with the hieroglyphic place name 'Aiina.[169]

Ijon is commonly identified with Tel Dibbine, a tell near Marjayoun, Lebanon.[171]

Iphtah edit

Iphtah (the King James Version spells it Jiphtah) was, according to Joshua 15:43, a place in the Shephelah of the Tribe of Judah. The location is unknown today.[172]

Iphtah-el edit

Iphtah-el (the King James Version spells it Jiphtah-el) is the name of a place mentioned only in Joshua 19:14 and 19:27.[173] Joshua describes it as being along the northern border of the Tribe of Zebulun, in the area adjoining the territory of the Tribe of Asher. The biblical Iphtah-el is probably the place known today as Khirbet Japhet.[174]

Irpeel edit

Irpeel is the name of a town mentioned only in Joshua 18:27, in the territory of the Tribe of Benjamin.[175]

Ithlah edit

Ithlah (King James Version Jethlah) is a location which, according to Joshua 19:42, was part of the territory of the Tribe of Dan. The location has not been identified by modern scholarship.[176]

Ittah-kazin edit

See Eth-kazin.

J edit

Jabneel edit

Jabneel (once Jabneh) is the name given in the Hebrew Bible for two locations.

  • The first is a Philistine city, considered by Joshua 15:11 to have belonged to the territory of the Tribe of Judah.[177][178] In 2 Chronicles 26:6, where the name is shortened to "Jabneh," it is recorded that Uzziah, as part of his attacks on Philistine cities, broke down its wall.[178]
  • The second is assigned by Joshua 19:33 to the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali.

Jahaz edit

Jahaz (or Jahaza, Jahazah, Jahzah. Iahaz) was the site of the battle between King Sihon and the advancing Israelite people, according to Numbers 21:23[179] and later became a levitical city in the territory of Reuben, east of the River Jordan.[180]

Jahaz is mentioned in both the Hebrew Testament (Yahats, Isaiah 16:4, Jeremiah 48:34; Yahatsah or Yahtsah, Numbers 21:23, Deuteronomy 2:32, Joshua 13:18, Joshua 21:36) and the King James Version ("Jahazah": Judges 11:20, Jeremiah 48:21, 1 Chronicles 6:78 "Jahzah") and in the Mesha Stele.

André Lemaire places it somewhere along the northeast border of Moab.[181]

Janim edit

Janim or Janum is a location mentioned only in Joshua 15:53, which places it in the hill-country of Judah, somewhere near Beth-tappuah.[182]

Jearim edit

Mount Jearim is mentioned in Joshua 15:10, a verse which described the northern border of the Tribe of Judah.[183] According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica the term described in this case not a mountain in the modern sense of the word, but a ridge, and "Jearim" is probably an incorrect reading where "Jarib" or "Ephron" was originally intended.[183]

Jegar-sahadutha edit

See Galeed.

Jeruel edit

The "wilderness of Jeruel" is the place where, according to 2 Chronicles 20:16, Jahaziel told Jehoshaphat to expect an invading army of Moabites, Ammonites, and Edomites.[184]

Jethlah edit

See Ithlah.

Jiphtah edit

See Iphtah.

Jiphtah-el edit

See Iphtah-el.

Jogbehah edit

Jogbehah is a city east of the Jordan River, mentioned in Numbers 32:35, as one of the locations in the Transjordan granted to the Tribe of Gad by Moses. It reappears in the story of Gideon.[185] It was probably an Ammonite fortress, now named Rugm al-Gubekha.[186]

Jokdeam edit

Jokdeam is the name of a location mentioned only once in the Bible, in Joshua 15:56.[187] The passage identifies it as being in the hill-country of Judah, but beyond that its location is unknown today.[188]

K edit

Kamon edit

See Camon

Kasiphia edit

See Casiphia

Kirjathjearim edit

See Kiriath-Jearim

Kithlish edit

Kithlish is a man's wall and town in the plain of Judah (Joshua 15:40). It has been identified with Jelameh.

L edit

Laharoi edit

See Beer-lahai-roi.

Lebaoth edit

See Beth Lebaoth.

Lecah edit

Lecah or Lekah is a place mentioned in 1 Chronicles 4:21, which claims that Er, the son of Judah (son of Jacob) settled there.

Luhith edit

The "ascent of Luhith" is a location in Moab mentioned in Isaiah 15:5 and Jeremiah 48:5.

M edit

Mahaneh Dan edit

Mahaneh Dan or Mahaneh-dan is a location associated with the tribe of Dan. According to Judges 18:12, it was located to the west of Kirjath-jearim.[189][190] On the other hand, Judges 13:25 names it as the place where Samson lived and where "the spirit of the LORD began to stir in him", but gives it a different location, "between Zorah and Eshtaol".[191][190]

Makaz edit

Makaz is a location mentioned in 1 Kings 4:9, in a passage which describes king Solomon administering the kingdom of Israel by division into twelve districts. Makaz appears in a list of cities the rest of which belonged to the territory traditionally assigned to the Tribe of Dan,[192] so it appears likely that Makaz was originally intended as a reference to some location in Dan.[193]

Makkedah edit

or


m(j)ḳꜣtꜣ or mḳwtꜣ[194][195]
in hieroglyphs
Era: New Kingdom
(1550–1069 BC)

Makkedah (Hebrew: מַקֵּדָה; in LXX Ancient Greek: Μακηδά or Μακέδ as in 1 Maccabees; in Vulgate Latin: Mageth) was a city in the land of Canaan. Joshua 12:16 gives a list of thirty-one cities whose kings, according to the Book of Joshua, were defeated in the conquest of Canaan following the Exodus, and Makkedah is included.[196] Joshua 15:41 locates it in the part of the Shephelah assigned to the Tribe of Judah.[197] Joshua 10 relates a story of five "Amorite" kings hiding in the "cave of Makkedah" after a battle; afterward, they were removed from the cave and killed in a humiliating fashion. After this, Makkedah was captured.[198][199] Maspero, Müller and Budge identify Makouta mentioned in the Annals of Thutmose III at the Temple of Karnak with biblical Makkeda.[194][195] Historical geographers have struggled with its modern identification, with PEF surveyors Conder & Kitchener thinking the ancient site to be where was once built the Arab village of el-Mughar, north of Nahal Sorek.[200]

Manocho edit

Manocho appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua.[13][14]

Maon edit

This entry is about the location known as Maon or the "Wilderness of Maon". For the ethnic group known by that name, see List of minor biblical tribes § Maon.

Maon, according to Joshua 15:55, was a place in the highlands of the Tribe of Judah[201] identified in modern times with Khirbet Maʿin (or in Hebrew, Horvat Maʿon).[202] According to 1 Samuel 23:24, the Wilderness of Maon, in the plain on the south of Jeshimon, was one of the places where David hid from King Saul.[203][204] Nabal, the rich but callous property owner who refused to support David's men in 1 Samuel 25:1-11 was from Maon.[205] In the Septuagint version of 1 Samuel, David retreated to the Wilderness of Maon after the death of Samuel,[206] but in the Massoretic Text he went to the Wilderness of Paran.

Through the use of genealogy, Maon was personified as a descendant of Hebron.[207]

There was an Arab village and there is now an Israeli settlement at Ma'on, Har Hebron in the West Bank.

Maralah edit

Maralah is a place mentioned only in Joshua 19:11, where it describes a locality in the territory of the Tribe of Zebulun, along its southwestern border.[208]

Masrekah edit

Masrekah, according to Genesis 36:36 and 1 Chronicles 1:47, is where the Edomite king Samlah lived.

Meah edit

Meah is the name of a tower named in Nehemiah 3:1 and 12:39.

Mejarcon edit

Mejarcon (also spelled Mejarkon or Me-jarkon) was a location on the border of the tribe of Dan.[209]

Meonenim edit

Meonenim appears in Judges 9:37, in the Hebrew phrase elon meonenim which is variously translated as "plain of Meonenim," "Elon-meonenim," "oak of Meonenim," or "the Diviners' Oak."[210][211]

Mephaath edit

Mephaath was a levitical city of the Merarites lying in the district of the Mishor in the territory of the tribe of Reuben according to Joshua 21:37,[212] and was mentioned in condemnation by the prophet Jeremiah in Jeremiah 48:21.[213]

Michmethath edit

Michmethath (Michmethah, Mikmethath, Micmethath) is the name of a place mentioned in Joshua 16:6 and 17:7. 16:6 records that it is along the north end of the territory of the Tribe of Ephraim. 17:7 indicates that it was along the south end of the territory of the Tribe of Manasseh. From the biblical description it would appear to have been southeast of Shechem.[214]

Middin edit

The town of Middin is mentioned in passing in Joshua 15:61, in a list of six towns in the wilderness of the territory of the tribe of Judah.[215] Its exact location is unknown.[216]

Migron edit

There is a place called Migron on the outskirts of Gibeah mentioned in 1 Samuel 14:2, where King Saul was based,[217] different from the Migron mentioned in Isaiah 10:28, which is north of Michmash.[218][219]

Minni edit

Minni is mentioned in Jeremiah 51:27 as the name of a province in Armenia,[220] which was at this time under the Median kings. Armenia is regarded by some as Har-minni i.e., the mountainous country of Minni.[221]

Minnith edit

Minnith is mentioned in Judges 11:33 as marking the extent of Jephthah's victory over the Ammonites[222] and in Ezekiel 27:17 as a wheat-farming city.[223] Minnith, Missouri takes its name from the reference in Ezekiel.

Misrephoth-maim edit

Misrephoth-maim is the name of a place associated with Sidon where, according to the Book of Joshua, Joshua pursued the retreating Canaanites after a battle at Merom.[224][225] According to Joshua 13:6 it is found near the boundary between the northern territory of the Tribes of Israel and the Sidonians.[225]

Mount Jearim edit

See Jearim.

N edit

Neah edit

Neah is a location mentioned only in Joshua 19:13.[226][227] The Book of Joshua places it in the territory of the Tribe of Zebulun, near the valley of Iphtah-el.[228]

Neballat edit

Neballat is the name of a town listed among the towns where people of the Tribe of Benjamin lived according to Nehemiah 11:34.[229][230] Today it is known as Beit Nebala.[231]

Nibshan edit

Nibshan is the name of a town in the wilderness of Judah, mentioned only in Judges 15:62.

No edit

No or No-amon is the name of a city in Egypt mentioned in negative terms by the prophets Jeremiah (46:25), Ezekiel (30:14-16), and Nahum (3:8). It is most commonly identified in modern scholarship with Thebes, but in the Septuagint, Vulgate, and a variety of rabbinical commentators it is interpreted as Alexandria.[232][233]

P edit

Parbar edit

Parbar, according to the King James Version, is a place-name mentioned in 1 Chronicles 26:18, in a description of the divisions of gatekeepers for the Temple in Jerusalem. However, in more recent scholarship, the word parbar or parwar is generally taken not as a proper noun, but as a common noun, with various proposals as to its meaning. Canadian academic Donna Runnalls suggests that "it seems to refer to a structure which was located at the top of the road on the west side of the temple".[234] The New Revised Standard Version translates the word as " the colonnade on the west".[235]

Perez Uzzah edit

Perez Uzzah (Hebrew, "outburst against Uzzah")[236] is a place name which appears only in the biblical narrative about Uzzah, a man who was killed by God for touching the Ark of the Covenant (2 Samuel 6:8; 1 Chronicles 13:11). David named it in commemoration of Uzzah's death. The location has not been identified.[237]

Phagor edit

Phagor (Greek: Φαγὼρ) appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua,[238][14] in a grouping of 11 cities of Judah not listed in the Hebrew text. It is rendered as "Peor" in the Contemporary English Version (1995).[239]

Pul edit

Pul, a place name in Isaiah 66:19 in Hebrew, may refer to Put or Phut.[240]

R edit

Rabbith edit

Rabbith, according to Joshua 19:20, was a location within the territory of the Tribe of Issachar.[241]

Racal edit

Racal (or Rachal or Rakal), according to 1 Samuel 30:29, was one of the locations were David sent plunder after defeating a group of Amalekites. The site is unknown and mentioned nowhere else. It may have been a copyist's error for Carmel.[241]

Rakkath edit

 
Tel Rakat, looking north over the Sea of Galilee

Rakkath (also Rakat or Rakkat) is mentioned in Joshua 19:35 as a fenced or fortified city in the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali[242] and is considered according to Jewish tradition to be the location where the city of Tiberias was built from around 20 CE.[243] It is identified by some with Tel Rakat (Khirbet el Kaneitriyeh on PEF Survey of Palestine map).

Rakkon edit

Rakkon, according to the Masoretic Text of Judges 19:46, is a place-name for a locality along the borders of the Tribe of Dan. A common opinion is that the place-name Rakkon (Hebrew hrqwn) originally through a mis-copying of part of the previous place-name Me Jarkon (Hebrew my hyrqwn), which is mentioned immediately preceding it.[244] If it is a genuine place-name, its location is uncertain, and it is unclear whether it refers to a town or a river.[244] The Septuagint omits it altogether.[245]

Ramath-Mizpeh edit

Ramath-Mizpeh, according to Joshua 13:26, was a location in the territory of the Tribe of Gad, a Transjordanian tribe. It is possibly the same as present-day Iraq al-Amir.[246]

Rammath-Lehi edit

'Rammath-Lehi, according to the Old Testament Book of Judges, was the name given to this place by Samson when he defeated a thousand Philistines.

Ramat-Negev edit

A place named Ramat-Negev (Hebrew rmt ngb) is assigned to the Tribe of Simeon by Joshua 19:8. It is likely the same as location as the Ramot-Negev (rmwt ngb) in 1 Samuel 30:27, where it is named as a location to which David sent plunder from his raid against the Amalekites.[241] Ramat or Ramot Negev is also mentioned in one of the Arad ostraca, a series of letters recovered from Tel Arad, ordering that soldiers be sent to Ramat-Negev as protection against Edomite invasion.[247]

It is possible that Ramot-Negev is the place now known as Hurvath Uza.[248] See also Baalath-Beer.

Rekem edit

This is about the city. For individuals of the same name, see List of minor biblical figures § Rekem.

Rekem is the name of a city or fortified town in the territory of the Tribe of Benjamin according to Joshua 18:27. The location is unknown.[249]

Rock of Escape edit

See Sela Hammahlekoth.

Rogelim edit

Rogelim is a place mentioned twice in 2 Samuel, both times in relation to Barzillai the Gileadite. It is identified as his city (17:27) and the place from which he came to meet King David after the revolt of Absalom (19:31). Its location was in Gilead but has not been precisely identified.[250] Strong's Concordance calls is "a (place of) fullers.[251]

Rumah edit

Rumah or Ruma is a place-name in the Hebrew Bible. It is mentioned in 2 Kings 23:26, which identifies king Jehoiakim's mother as "Zebudah, the daughter of Pedaiah of Rumah." A widespread, but not unanimous, identification sees this as the modern site of Ruma (Tell Rumeh) in the Lower Galilee.[252][253]

Joshua 15:52 lists a "Rumah" or "Dumah" (depending on the manuscript followed) as a city in the hill-country of Judah.[254] This is often associated with the modern village of Dūme, although scholars have expressed some uncertainty about this location as well.[255][253]

S edit

Salim edit

A place-name Salim appears in John 3:23, in the phrase "Aenon of Salim." The location has not been identified, though several possibilities have been suggested.[256]

Sansannah edit

Sansannah appears in Joshua 15:31, in a list of towns in the Negev of Judah. Scholars equate it with the modern Kirbet esh-Shamsaniyat, although with some doubt.[257] In Joshua 19, a portion of the territory of Judah is assigned to the Tribe of Simeon, and in this list instead of Sansannah the text reads "Hazar Susah" (verse 5).[258]

Sebam edit

See Sibmah.

Secu edit

Secu (also Seku, Sechu) is a place-name found in 1 Samuel 19:22. Its site has not been identified, and it is mentioned nowhere else in the Bible.[259]

Sela Hammahlekoth edit

Sela Hammahlekoth (or Rock of Escape) is the name which according to 1 Samuel 23:28 was given to a location where David narrowly escaped being killed by Saul. The location has not been definitely identified, but the biblical story places it in the Wilderness of Maon.[260]

Seneh edit

Seneh is the name of one of two rocky cliffs (the other being Bozez) through which Jonathan had to pass during his attack against a Philistine garrison (1 Samuel 14:4).

Shaalbim edit

Shaalbim is the name of a location which appears twice (in the form "Shaalbim") in the Hebrew Bible, in Judges 3:5 and again in 1 Kings 4:9. The passage in Judges 1 discusses the situation after the death of Joshua, in which the Tribe of Dan had difficulty expelling the Amorites from the land allotted to them, and the Amorites forced the Danites to live in the hill-country, keeping the valley for themselves (Judges 1:1-34). "But the Amorites were resolved to dwell in Harheres, in Aijalon, and in Shaalbim; yet the hand of the house of Joseph prevailed, so that they became tributary. And the border of the Amorites was from the ascent of Akrabbim, from Sela, and upward."[261]

1 Kings 4 records that Solomon divided his kingdom into districts under various governors, and chose a man named Ben Deker as governor "in Makaz, and in Shaalbim, and Beth-shemesh, and Elon-beth-hanan".[262]

In Joshua 19:42, a Shaalabbin is listed as a location within the territory allotted to Dan, and it is thus likely to be the same as the location "Shaalbim" which Dan was unable to occupy.[176] This is generally considered to have been located on the site of modern Salbit.[176][263]

It may also be the same as the location referred to as "Shaalban" (2 Samuel 23:32; 1 Chronicles 11:33), and may have been the "Shaalim" of 1 Samuel 9:4.[263]

Shaalim edit

Saul and his assistant passed through the land of Shaalim looking for his father's lost donkeys, according to 1 Samuel 9:4,[264] probably in the highlands of Ephraim. Some manuscripts of the Septuagint locate the burial place of Abdon in Pirathon, in the hill country of Ephraim, in the land of Shaalim,[265] although other versions read "in the hill country of the Amalekites".[266]

Shamir edit

This is about the biblical locations, not the person mentioned in 1 Chronicles 24:24.

Shamir is the name of a biblical place which according to Joshua 15:48 was found in the hill-country of the Tribe of Judah.

According to Judges 10:1-2, the Israelite leader Tola lived, died, and was buried in a location called Shamir in the hill-country of the Tribe of Ephraim.

Shaveh Kiriathaim edit

According to Genesis 14:5, Chedorlaomer defeated the Emim at Shaveh Kiriathaim.

Shaveh, Valley of edit

A valley named Shaveh (king's valley) is the location where, according to Genesis 14:17, the king of Sodom went to meet Abram after the defeat of the forces of Chedorlaomer.

Sibmah edit

Sibmah (Hebrew, Sibmah) is a location which according to Numbers 32:37-38 and Joshua 13:19 was in the territory of the Tribe of Reuben.[267] In the King James Version it is sometimes spelled Shibmah. Isaiah 16:7-8 refers to it as a Moabite city, as does Jeremiah 48:31-32. In one case it is called Sebam[268] (Hebrew Sebam), spelled Shebam in the King James Version (Numbers 32:3). Its specific location is not known.[269]

Stone of Bohan, son of Reuben edit

The stone of Bohan, son of Reuben is mentioned in Joshua 15:6 as a point along the boundary of the land allocated to the tribe of Judah.[270] Bohan is not named as one of Reuben's sons where they are listed in Genesis 46:9.[271] Bohan is a name which appears twice in the Hebrew Bible.[272] In both cases it appears in the phrase "the stone of Bohan the son of Reuben," which refers to a place along the boundary between Judah and the Tribe of Benjamin.[273]

Suphah edit

Suphah is mentioned in Numbers 21:14,[274] quoting the lost Book of the Wars of the Lord, and is possibly the same as Suph.

T edit

Tappuah edit

Tappuah, Hebrew for 'apple', and compounds thereof, are toponyms from the Book of Joshua:

  • Beth-Tappuah, city in the hill country of Judah (Joshua 15:53), commonly identified with Taffuh, a Palestinian town in the West Bank, 4 miles west of Hebron.
  • Tappuah, city in the lowland of Judah (Joshua 12:17, 15:34)
  • Tappuah, capital of a Canaanite king defeated by Joshua. It was allotted to the powerful tribe of Ephraim, who first needed to capture the city. It stood in the eastern parts of its realm and on the border with Manasseh, who received the lands around it (Joshua 16:8, 17:8). It is usually identified with Tell esh-Sheikh Abu Zarad, 8 miles (13 km) south of Shechem and in the vicinity of modern Yasuf (identified with the Yashub of LXX and possibly of the Samaria Ostraca).[275][276] Pottery found at Sheikh Abu Zarad was dated to the Late Bronze and Iron Ages.[276] Encyclopaedia Judaica sees En-tappuah from Joshua 17:7 (see below) as being an alternative name for the city.[276] A by now discarded identification with the site fortified by Bacchides was based on a misreading of Josephus (Ant., 13:15 / Whiston Book 13, Ch 1:3; 1 Maccabees 9:50): Bacchides fortified Theko (Tekoa), not Tepho (Tappuah).[276]
  • En-tappuah ('Tappuah Spring'), in the eastern parts of Manasseh on the border with Ephraim (Joshua 17:7); identified with the 'Ayn al-Tuffūḥ spring near the village of Yasuf.[276] Considered to be an alternative name for the city of Tappuah in Efraim.[276]
  • Tiphsah, city captured by King Mehahem2 Kings 15:16. In the Greek version though, the city is named as Tappuah, which would then be the one in Ephraim (see above).[275]

Tatam edit

Tatam appears in the Septuagint version of Joshua 15:59-60.[14]

Theco edit

Theco appears in the Septuagint version of Joshua 15:59-60.[14]

Thether edit

Thether appears in the Septuagint version of Joshua 15:59-60.[14]

Thobes edit

Thobes appears in the Septuagint version of Joshua 15:59-60.[14]

U edit

Uzzen-sherah edit

Uzzen-sherah (or Uzzen-sheerah) is the name of a town mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 7:24.[277] It was named for its builder, Sherah, daughter of Ephraim. While it is believed to have been located close to Beth-horon, the exact location has not been identified.[278]

W edit

Well Lahairoi, the edit

See Beer-lahai-roi.

Z edit

Zaphon edit

Zaphon (Hebrew: Tsaphonah, rendered Sephenia in some manuscripts of the Septuagint)[279] is mentioned in Joshua 13:27 as a location within the territory of the tribe of Gad[280] and in Judges 12:1 as the location where the Ephraimites met with Jephthah and his army to complain that Jephthah had fought the Ammonites without calling on the Ephraimites for military assistance.[281] The Easy-to-Read Version calls it a "city".[282] Some translations (e.g. the King James Version) render Tsaphonah as "northwards".

Zelzah edit

A place at the border of Benjamin, where two men were to meet Saul as a sign of his kingship, in 1 Samuel 10:2.[283] This is the only mention of the place in the Bible, and its location is unidentified.[284]

Zereda edit

Zereda(h) is the birthplace of Jeroboam, the first king of the northern Kingdom of Israel and the son of Nebat of the Tribe of Ephraim.[285]

Ziz edit

The "ascent of Ziz" is the place where, according to 2 Chronicles 20:16, Jahaziel told Jehoshaphat to expect an invading army of Moabites, Ammonites, and Edomites to ascend in front of the wilderness of Jeruel.[286]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 2 Kings 5:12
  2. ^ Joshua 21:30; 1 Chronicles 6:74
  3. ^ Joshua 3:16
  4. ^ "Adam", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  5. ^ Joshua 15:22
  6. ^ a b "Adadah", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  7. ^ Joshua 15:30
  8. ^ "Adithaim", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  9. ^ Acts 27:27
  10. ^ W. J. Woodhouse, "Adria", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  11. ^ a b "Aesora", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  12. ^ a b c "Esora", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  13. ^ a b c d e Joshua 15:59–60
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Anson Rainey (1982). "Wine from the royal vineyards". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 245 (Winter). The American Schools of Oriental Research: 57–62, p. 59. doi:10.2307/1356528. JSTOR 1356528. S2CID 164003915.
  15. ^ Ezra 8:15,21,31
  16. ^ a b Derek Kidner (2 April 2016). Ezra and Nehemiah. InterVarsity Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-8308-9473-4.
  17. ^ Barnes, A., Barnes' Notes on Ezra 8, accessed 6 April 2020
  18. ^ Joshua 21:18
  19. ^ Joshua 19:26
  20. ^ a b "Amad", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  21. ^ Joshua 15:26
  22. ^ "Amam", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  23. ^ Joshua 19:19
  24. ^ Douglas & Tenney 2011, pp. 64–65
  25. ^ See the NIV, Holman, NET, OJB, CSB, EXB, MEV, CEV, and the Message.
  26. ^ For example, the ESV, KJV, RV, ASV, JPS (1917), ESV, NASB, and NLT.
  27. ^ "Mearah", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  28. ^ Daniel I. Block (13 October 2009). Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1 & 2 Samuel. Zondervan. p. 173. ISBN 978-0-310-25574-1.
  29. ^ "Ashnah", in Douglas & Tenney 2011, p. 130
  30. ^ Joshua 16:5
  31. ^ Douglas & Tenney 2011, p. 138
  32. ^ Richard D. Nelson (1 August 1997). Joshua (1997): A Commentary. Presbyterian Publishing Corporation. p. 285. ISBN 978-1-61164-509-5.
  33. ^ Numbers 21:16–18
  34. ^ Douai-Rheims Bible
  35. ^ Judges 9:21
  36. ^ Matthew Poole's Commentary on Judges 9, accessed 30 October 2016
  37. ^ Pulpit Commentary on Judges 9, accessed 30 October 2016
  38. ^ a b "Beer-lahai-roi", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  39. ^ Genesis 16:4
  40. ^ Genesis 24:62, 25:11
  41. ^ Genesis 21:14
  42. ^ Genesis 16:7, 14
  43. ^ Nadav Naʼaman (2005). Ancient Israel and Its Neighbors: Interaction and Counteraction. Eisenbrauns. p. 273. ISBN 978-1-57506-108-5.
  44. ^ a b Gauthier, Henri (1925). Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques Vol. 2. p. 2.
  45. ^ Budge 1920, p. 977
  46. ^ Holman Bible Dictionary (1991), Beon
  47. ^ Judges 9:21
  48. ^ Judges 1:33
  49. ^ "The term "Aven"". Archived from the original on August 23, 2008.
  50. ^ "The term "Beth-aven" in the Old Testament". Archived from the original on February 18, 2014.
  51. ^ Judges 7:24
  52. ^ 1 Samuel 7:5–12
  53. ^ Josephus, De Bello Judaico (Wars of the Jews) 4.7.6 (4.437)
  54. ^ Frumkin, Amos; Elitzur, Yoel (2002). "Historic Dead Sea Level Fluctuations Calibrated with Geological and Archaeological Evidence". Quaternary Research. 57 (3): 341. Bibcode:2002QuRes..57..334F. doi:10.1006/qres.2002.2330. ISSN 0033-5894. S2CID 129375298.
  55. ^ See Joshua 15:32, 19:6
  56. ^ "Beth-lebaoth", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  57. ^ Freedman 2000, p. 173
  58. ^ Deuteronomy 3:29; Deuteronomy 4:46
  59. ^ Deuteronomy 5:1–21
  60. ^ Conder, C. R.; Kitchener, H. H. (1883). The Survey of Western Palestine. Vol. 3. The Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund. pp. 35, 112.
  61. ^ 1 Chronicles 2:24
  62. ^ Pulpit Commentary on Judges 10, accessed 5 November 2016
  63. ^ Easton's Bible Dictionary: Camon, accessed 5 November 2016
  64. ^ Holman Bible Dictionary (1991), "Casiphia."
  65. ^ Ezekiel 6:14
  66. ^ Keith W. Carley (14 November 1974). The Book of the Prophet Ezekiel. CUP Archive. p. 48. GGKEY:LGKJ9RGUSCS.
  67. ^ The King James Version calls it "Diblath," while New International Version, New American Standard Bible, Holman Christian Standard Bible read "Diblah." It is emended to "Riblah" in the New Living Translation, and New English Translation.
  68. ^ "Dilean", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  69. ^ Douglas & Tenney 2011, p. 358
  70. ^ "Dimonah", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  71. ^ Douglas & Tenney 2011, p. 378
  72. ^ a b "Elealeh", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  73. ^ Numbers 32:3, 37
  74. ^ Douglas & Tenney 2011, p. 399
  75. ^ "Eleph", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  76. ^ Pitkänen 2010, p. 316
  77. ^ Conder and Kitchener, 1881, SWP III, p. 18, 47
  78. ^ a b "Elon-beth-hanan", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  79. ^ "Eltolad", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  80. ^ Richard R. Losch (May 2013). All the Places in the Bible. Xlibris Corporation. p. 597. ISBN 978-1-4836-2826-4.
  81. ^ "Enaim", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  82. ^ a b "En-eglaim", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  83. ^ Monica L. W. Brady, in Freedman 2000, p. 406
  84. ^ "En-gannim", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  85. ^ S. A. Cook, "En-haddah", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  86. ^ "En-hakkore", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  87. ^ Genesis 26:20
  88. ^ On the location, see Joshua 15:7 and 18:17
  89. ^ On the etymology and proposed locations, see "En-shemesh", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  90. ^ Joshua 15:52
  91. ^ Tremper III Longman (1 August 2013). The Baker Illustrated Bible Dictionary. Baker Books. p. 888. ISBN 978-1-4412-3886-3.
  92. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Ezel", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  93. ^ 1 Samuel 20:19
  94. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Galeed", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  95. ^ a b T. K. Cheyne, "Gallim", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  96. ^ 1 Samuel 25:44
  97. ^ Most existing translations of the Hebrew Bible or Old Testament into English are based primarily on the Masoretic Text. For a scholarly translation of the Septuagint into English, see the New English Translation of the Septuagint. For the Septuagint reading of Joshua 15:59a, see this PDF, on page 187: [1]. The name Iesous found in the PDF is the Greek equivalent of Joshua.
  98. ^ Joshua 19:45; Joshua 21:25; 1 Chronicles 6:69
  99. ^ Negev,Avraham/Gibson,Shimon, Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land, New York/London 2001, p.195, ISBN 0-8264-1316-1 (English)
  100. ^ a b Rainey, Anson (1998). "Review by: Anson F. Rainey". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 118 (1): 73. JSTOR 606301.
  101. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Gebim", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  102. ^ Nadav Naʼaman (2005). Ancient Israel and Its Neighbors: Interaction and Counteraction. Eisenbrauns. p. 353. ISBN 978-1-57506-108-5.
  103. ^ a b "Gederothaim", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  104. ^ "Geliloth", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  105. ^ Ezra 2:20
  106. ^ "Gibbar", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  107. ^ a b c T. K. Cheyne, "Gittaim", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  108. ^ Nehemiah 11:33
  109. ^ 2 Samuel 4:3
  110. ^ 1 Samuel 14:33
  111. ^ 2 Kings 17:6, 18:11
  112. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Hachilah, Hill of", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  113. ^ 1 Samuel 23:19, 26:1
  114. ^ a b Budge 1920, p. 1021
  115. ^ a b Gauthier, Henri (1927). Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques Vol. 4. p. 23.
  116. ^ a b Gaston Maspero. Daressy, Georges (ed.). Recueil de travaux relatifs à la philologie et à l'archéologie égyptiennes et assyriennes: pour servir de bulletin à la Mission Française du Caire Vol. XX (in French). p. 118. Retrieved 14 April 2020.
  117. ^ Joshua 15:37
  118. ^ a b T. K. Cheyne, "Hadashah", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  119. ^ Joshua 19:25
  120. ^ a b S. A. Cook, "Hali", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  121. ^ Joshua 19:35
  122. ^ a b c T. K. Cheyne, "Hammon", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  123. ^ Joshua 19:28
  124. ^ Joshua 21:32
  125. ^ Ezekiel 39:16
  126. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Hamonah", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  127. ^ Joshua 19:19
  128. ^ "Hapharaim", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  129. ^ 1 Samuel 22:5
  130. ^ McClintock and Strong Biblical Cyclopedia: Forest
  131. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Hazar-addar", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  132. ^ a b W. R. Smith and T. K. Cheyne, "Hazar-enan", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  133. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Hazar-gaddah", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  134. ^ Joshua 15:28, Joshua 19:3, 1 Chronicles 4:28, Nehemiah 11:27.
  135. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Hazar-shual", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  136. ^ a b T. K. Cheyne, "Hazar-susah", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  137. ^ Ezekiel 47:16
  138. ^ a b "Hazar-hatticon", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  139. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Hazor-hadattah", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  140. ^ a b c T. K. Cheyne, "Heleph", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  141. ^ Joshua 19:25
  142. ^ S. A. Cook, "Helkath-hazzurim", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  143. ^ 2 Kings 19:13, Revised Version. The Rabshakeh's remarks are repeated in Isaiah 37:13.
  144. ^ E. Ray Clendenen; Jeremy Royal Howard (1 August 2015). The Holman Illustrated Bible Commentary. B&H Publishing Group. p. 403. ISBN 978-0-8054-9930-8.
  145. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Hena", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  146. ^ Joshua 12
  147. ^ 1 Kings 4:10
  148. ^ a b c Yohanan Aharoni (1 January 1979). The Land of the Bible: A Historical Geography. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 310. ISBN 978-0-664-24266-4.
  149. ^ See Numbers 26:32-33; 27:1; Joshua 17:2-3
  150. ^ "Heshmon", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  151. ^ Joshua 15:21; Joshua 21:15
  152. ^ Holman Bible Dictionary (1991), "Holon."
  153. ^ "Holon", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  154. ^ Joshua 19:38
  155. ^ Douglas & Tenney 2011, p. 621
  156. ^ Budge 1920, p. 1025
  157. ^ Gauthier 1927, p. 164
  158. ^ a b T. K. Cheyne, "Hosah", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  159. ^ Pitkänen 2010, p. 327.
  160. ^ "Tell Rachidiyeh: modern identifications of places in the Bible". www.openbible.info. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
  161. ^ "Khirbet el Hos: modern identifications of places in the Bible". www.openbible.info.
  162. ^ Joshua 19.34
  163. ^ Woudstra, Martin H. (1981). The Book of Joshua. Wm. B. Eerdmans. p. 291. ISBN 978-0-8028-2525-4.
  164. ^ Joshua 15:54
  165. ^ Freedman 2000, p. 620
  166. ^ 1 Chronicles 11:29, 1 Chronicles 27:11
  167. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Idalah", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  168. ^ Budge 1920, p. 967
  169. ^ a b Gauthier, Henri (1925). Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques Vol. 1. p. 131.
  170. ^ Freedman 2000, p. 628
  171. ^ Marom, Nimrod; Bechar, Shlomit; Panitz-Cohen, Nava; Mullins, Robert A.; Yahalom-Mack, Naama (August 2020). "Faunal remains from Tel Abel Beth Maacah: Social change in the late second millennium BCE Hula Valley". Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 32: 102394. Bibcode:2020JArSR..32j2394M. doi:10.1016/j.jasrep.2020.102394. ISSN 2352-409X. S2CID 219480588.
  172. ^ Woudstra 1981, p. 249
  173. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Jiphtah-el", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  174. ^ Cooke, G. A. (1990) [1918]. The Book of Joshua. Cambridge University Press Archive. p. 176. GGKEY:LGLXENDA9WK.
  175. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Irpeel", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  176. ^ a b c Pitkänen 2010, p. 330
  177. ^ Joshua 15:11
  178. ^ a b T. K. Cheyne, "Jabneel", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  179. ^ Numbers 21:23
  180. ^ Joshua 13:18
  181. ^ Lemaire, André (2007). "The Mesha Stele and the Omri Dynasty". In Lester L. Grabbe (ed.). Ahab Agonistes: The Rise and Fall of the Omri Dynasty. p. 141.
  182. ^ "Janum", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  183. ^ a b "Jearim, Mount", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  184. ^ 2 Chronicles 20:16
  185. ^ Judges 8:11
  186. ^ Joseph Coleson; Lawson G. Stone; Jason Driesbach (2012). Joshua, Judges, Ruth. Tyndale House Publishers. p. 293. ISBN 978-0-8423-3429-7.
  187. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Jokdeam", in Cheyne & Black 1901
  188. ^ Pitkänen 2010, p. 295
  189. ^ Judges 18:12
  190. ^ a b S. A. Cook, "Mahaneh-dan", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  191. ^ Judges 13:25
  192. ^ 1 Kings 4:9
  193. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Makaz", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  194. ^ a b Gauthier, Henri (1926). Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques Vol. 3. p. 19.
  195. ^ a b Budge 1920, p. 998
  196. ^ Joshua 12:16
  197. ^ Joshua 15:41
  198. ^ 10:21
  199. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Makkedah", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  200. ^ Conder, C.R.; Kitchener, H. H. (1882). The Survey of Western Palestine: Memoirs of the Topography, Orography, Hydrography, and Archaeology. Vol. 2. London: Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund., pp. 411–412
  201. ^ Joshua 15:55
  202. ^ Jodi Magness, The Archaeology of the Early Islamic Settlement in Palestine, Eisenbrauns, 2003 Vol.1 pp.96–97
  203. ^ 1 Samuel 23:24
  204. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Maon", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  205. ^ 1 Samuel 25:1–11
  206. ^ 1 Samuel 25:1 in Brenton's Septuagint Translation
  207. ^ 1 Chronicles 2:45
  208. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Maralah", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  209. ^ Joshua 19:46
  210. ^ T. K. Cheyne, "Meonenim", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  211. ^ For "plain of Meonenim," see KJV. For Elon-meonenim, see the Jewish Publication Society translation of 1917. For "oak of Meonenim" see the Revised Version. For "Diviners' Oak," see English Standard Version.
  212. ^ Joshua 21:37
  213. ^ Jeremiah 48:21
  214. ^ Liverani, Mario. “Amarna Mikmate — Biblical Michmethath.” Zeitschrift Des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins, vol. 114, no. 2, 1998, pp. 137–138., www.jstor.org/stable/27931587.
  215. ^ Joshua 15:61
  216. ^ Yohanan Aharoni (1 January 1979). The Land of the Bible: A Historical Geography. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 356. ISBN 978-0-664-24266-4.
  217. ^ 1 Samuel 14:2
  218. ^ Isaiah 10:28
  219. ^ Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 Samuel 14, accessed 6 May 2017
  220. ^ Jeremiah 51:27
  221. ^ Easton's Bible Dictionary: Minni, accessed 7 November 2016
  222. ^ Judges 11:33
  223. ^ Ezekiel 27:17
  224. ^ Joshua 11:8
  225. ^ a b T. K. Cheyne, "Misrephoth-maim", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  226. ^ Joshua 19:13
  227. ^ "Neah", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  228. ^ Joshua 19:10-16
  229. ^ Nehemiah 11:34
  230. ^ "Neballat", in Cheyne & Black 1902
  231. ^ Chad Brand; Archie England; Charles W. Draper (1 October 2003). Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary. B&H Publishing Group. p. 1618. ISBN 978-1-4336-6978-1.
  232. ^ Laurel Lanner (24 May 2006). Who Will Lament Her?: The Feminine and the Fantastic in the Book of Nahum. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-567-54397-4.
  233. ^ Huddlestun, John R. (2003). "Nahum, Nineveh, and the Nile: The Description of Thebes in Nahum 3:8–9". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 62 (2): 97–110. doi:10.1086/376364. JSTOR 10.1086/376364. S2CID 14130054.
  234. ^ Runnalls, Donna (1991). "The Parwār: A Place of Ritual Separation?". Vetus Testamentum. 41 (3): 324–331. doi:10.2307/1519072. JSTOR 1519072.
  235. ^ 1 Chronicles 26:18
  236. ^ Joze Krasovec (8 March 2010). The Transformation of Biblical Proper Names. A&C Black. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-567-45224-5.
  237. ^ Peter R. Ackroyd (8 December 1977). The Second Book of Samuel. Cambridge University Press. p. 245. ISBN 978-0-521-09754-3.
  238. ^ Joshua 15:59
  239. ^ Joshua 15:59: CEV
  240. ^ Skinner, J. (1898), Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on Isaiah 66, accessed 22 August 2022
  241. ^ a b c Ronald F. Youngblood (7 March 2017). 1 and 2 Samuel. Zondervan. p. 469. ISBN 978-0-310-53179-1.
  242. ^ Joshua 19:35
  243. ^ Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on Joshua 19, accessed 27 March 2016
  244. ^ a b Pitkänen 2010, p. 331
  245. ^ Cooke 1990, p. 186
  246. ^ T. Desmond Alexander; David W. Baker (13 January 2003). Dictionary of the Old Testament: Pentateuch: A Compendium of Contemporary Biblical Scholarship. InterVarsity Press. p. 345. ISBN 978-0-8308-1781-8.
  247. ^ Baruch Halpern; André Lemaire (7 July 2010). The Books of Kings: Sources, Composition, Historiography and Reception. BRILL. p. 238. ISBN 978-90-474-3073-5.
  248. ^ Samuel Rocca (20 October 2012). The Fortifications of Ancient Israel and Judah 1200–586 BC. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-84908-256-3.
  249. ^ Woudstra 1981, p. 225
  250. ^ Douglas & Tenney 2011, p. 1245
  251. ^ Strong's Concordance: Rogelim
  252. ^ Elitzur, Yoel (1994). "Rumah in Judah". Israel Exploration Journal. 44 (1/2): 127. JSTOR 27926337.
  253. ^ a b Zvi Gal (1992). Lower Galilee During the Iron Age. Eisenbrauns. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-931464-69-0.
  254. ^ Elitzur 1994, pp. 125–6
  255. ^ Elitzur 1994, p. 123
  256. ^ James H. Charlesworth (28 July 2006). Jesus and Archaeology. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 555. ISBN 978-0-8028-4880-2.
  257. ^ Pekka Pitkänen calls the identification "probably . . . fairly uncertain." Pitkänen 2010, p. 291
  258. ^ Richard D. Nelson (1 August 1997). Joshua (1997): A Commentary. Presbyterian Publishing Corporation. p. 220. ISBN 978-1-61164-509-5.
  259. ^ David Toshio Tsumura (15 March 2007). The First Book of Smauel. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 498. ISBN 978-0-8028-2359-5.
  260. ^ Douglas & Tenney 2011, p. 1307
  261. ^ Judges 1:35-36, Jewish Publication Society translation of 1917.
  262. ^ 1 Kings 4:9, Jewish Publication Society translation of 1917
  263. ^ a b Eric. F. Mason, "Shaalbim", in Freedman 2000, p. 1193
  264. ^ 1 Samuel 9:4
  265. ^ Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on Judges 12, accessed 11 April 2018
  266. ^ Judges 12:15
  267. ^ Numbers 32:37–38; Joshua 13:19NKJV
  268. ^ M. Jack Suggs; Katharine Doob Sakenfeld; James R. Mueller (12 March 1992). The Oxford Study Bible: Revised English Bible with Apocrypha. OUP USA. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-19-529000-4.
  269. ^ Ernest W. Nicholson (8 May 1975). The Book of the Prophet Jeremiah, Chapters 26-52. Cambridge University Press. p. 246. ISBN 978-0-521-09867-0.
  270. ^ Joshua 15:6
  271. ^ Genesis 46:9
  272. ^ Joshua 15:6; 18:17.
  273. ^ "Bohan", in Cheyne & Black 1899
  274. ^ Numbers 21:14
  275. ^ a b Wigoder, Geoffrey, ed. (2005). "Tappuah (3)". The Illustrated Dictionary and Concordance of the Bible (revised ed.). New York: Sterling Publishing. pp. 930–931. ISBN 1-4027-2820-4. A Canaanite kingdom centered around the city of the same name that was conquered by Joshua. The city itself was assigned to the tribe of Ephraim, while its lands were allotted to Manasseh. The location is probably modern Sheikh-Abu-Zarad, 8 miles (13 km) south of Shechem. Josh 12:17, 16:8, 17:8
  276. ^ a b c d e f "Tappuah", in Encyclopaedia Judaica, The Gale Group, 2007 edition. Referencing F.M. Abel (1936), RB 45, pp. 103ff. Via Jewish Virtual Library. Accessed 21 Feb 2024.
  277. ^ 1 Chronicles 7:24
  278. ^ Eunice Riedel (1981). The book of the Bible. Bantam Books. p. 505. ISBN 978-0-553-14649-3.
  279. ^ Ellicott's Commentary for Modern Readers on Judges 12, accessed 9 November 2016
  280. ^ Joshua 13:27
  281. ^ Judges 12:1
  282. ^ Judges 21:1: Easy-to-Read Version
  283. ^ 1 Samuel 10:2
  284. ^ Cohen A. Ed. Samuel: Soncino Books of the Bible. p. 52.
  285. ^ 1Kings 11:26
  286. ^ 2 Chronicles 20:16

General references edit

  • Budge, E. A. Wallis (1920). An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary. Vol. II. London: John Murray.
  • Cheyne, T. K.; Black, J. S., eds. (1899). Encyclopaedia Biblica. Vol. 1, A–D. Toronto: George N. Morang and Company.
  • Cheyne, T. K.; Black, J. S., eds. (1901). Encyclopaedia Biblica. Vol. 2, E–K. New York: The Macmillan Company.
  • Cheyne, T. K.; Black, J. S., eds. (1902). Encyclopaedia Biblica. Vol. 3, L–P. Toronto: George N. Morang and Company.
  • Cheyne, T. K.; Black, J. S., eds. (1903). Encyclopaedia Biblica. Vol. 4, Q–Z. Toronto: George N. Morang and Company.
  • Douglas, J. D.; Tenney, Merrill C. (2011). Zondervan Illustrated Bible Dictionary. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-310-49235-1.
  • Freedman, David Noel, ed. (2000). Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible. Amsterdam University Press. p. 173. ISBN 978-90-5356-503-2.
  • Pitkänen, Pekka (2010). Joshua. InterVarsity Press. ISBN 978-0-8308-2506-6.

list, minor, biblical, places, this, literature, related, list, incomplete, help, adding, missing, items, october, 2021, this, list, places, mentioned, bible, which, have, their, wikipedia, articles, also, list, biblical, places, locations, which, have, their,. This literature related list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items October 2021 This is a list of places mentioned in the Bible which do not have their own Wikipedia articles See also the list of biblical places for locations which do have their own article Contents Top A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z See also ReferencesA editAbana edit Abana according to 2 Kings 5 12 was one of the rivers of Damascus along with the Pharpar river 1 Abdon edit Abdon was a Levitical city in Asher allocated to the Gershonites according to Joshua 21 30 and 1 Chronicles 6 74 2 Abel Shittim edit Abel Shittim the last Israelite encampment before crossing into the Promised Land is identified by Josephus with Abila in Peraea probably the site of modern Tell el Hammam in Jordan Adam edit Adam was a location which according to Joshua 3 16 was along the Jordan River near Zarethan 3 According to Cheyne and Black it may be a scribal error for Adamah 4 Adadah edit Adadah is the name of a town mentioned in Joshua 15 22 in a list of towns inside the territory of the Tribe of Judah 5 The name Adadah appears nowhere else in the Bible 6 According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica the name Adadah may be a miswritten version of Ararah a name equivalent to Aroer 6 Addan edit Addan or Addon is a Babylonian location mentioned in Ezra 2 59 and Nehemiah 7 61 Adithaim edit Adithaim mentioned only in Joshua 15 30 7 is listed among locations belonging to Judah in the Shephelah 8 Adria edit Adria mentioned in Acts 27 27 9 is a term used for the division of the Mediterranean which lies between Sicily and Malta on the West and Crete on the East 10 Aesora edit Aesora or Esora is a location mentioned only in Judith 4 4 11 The Book of Judith is considered canonical by some Christians but not by Jews and most Protestants The Septuagint calls it Aisora Arasousia Aisoraa or Assaron depending on the manuscript 12 The book of Judith places it between Choba and the Valley of Salem 12 According to Cheyne and Black 1899 the exact location is uncertain 12 Aetan edit Aetan appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua 13 14 Ahava edit Ahava is the name of a canal or river mentioned in the Book of Ezra 15 16 The location is unknown 16 Albert Barnes says it was both a town and a river 17 Almon edit Almon is a location mentioned in Joshua 21 18 given to the Kohathites 18 and thought to be near the modern Israeli settlement at Almon Mateh Binyamin in the West Bank Amad edit Amad is a biblical place name mentioned only in Joshua 19 26 19 20 It appears in a list of locations that make up the borders of the territory assigned to the biblical Tribe of Asher 20 Amam edit Amam Hebrew אמם amam is an unidentified site in the Negeb of Judah near the border with Edom mentioned in Joshua 15 26 21 22 Anaharath edit Anaharath is described in Joshua 19 19 as a location on the border of the territory belonging to the Tribe of Issachar 23 It was most likely located at the site now known as Tel Rekhesh 24 Tell el Mukharkhash in the Tabor Stream valley Arah of the Sidonians edit Arah of the Sidonians is a place name which appears in Joshua 13 4 25 Other translations render the name Mearah 26 The initial syllable me here is commonly interpreted as a preposition yielding the translation from Arah instead of Mearah The me is also interpreted as from by Thomas Kelly Cheyne although he additionally proposed that further scribal error had influenced the word 27 Arumah edit Arumah is a location mentioned in Judges 9 41 as the place where Gideon s son Abimelech lived for a time The location is generally considered to be the same as the modern Jebel el Urmah 28 Ascent of Luhith edit See Luhith Ashnah edit Ashnah is the name given in Joshua 15 verses 33 and 43 for two places in the Shephelah of Judah For the first the modern location Aslin has been proposed for the second Idna 29 Ataroth addar edit Ataroth addar is a location mentioned in Joshua 16 5 30 It may be the same location as the Ataroth mentioned in 16 2 31 Aznoth tabor edit Aznoth tabor is the name of a place in the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali It is probably the modern Khirbet el Jebeil 32 c 3 miles north of Mount Tabor B editBeer edit Beer was a location reached by the Israelites during their Exodus journey mentioned in Numbers 21 16 18 33 After the death of Aaron the Israelites moved on apparently at pace through a series of locations along the Moabite Amorite border There was a well at Beer where Moses was able to assemble and refresh the travelling community and which was associated with a song regarding the Israelite leaders and the lawgiver in providing water Another Beer or Bera 34 is mentioned in Judges 9 21 as the place to which Gideon s youngest son Joatham or Jotham fled to escape from Abimelech after his 69 brothers had been killed 35 Matthew Poole described Beer as a place remote from Shechem and out of Abimelech s reach 36 and the Pulpit Commentary suggests it is either the same as Beeroth among the heights of the tribe of Benjamin Joshua 9 17 now El Birch the first halting place for caravans on the northern road from Jerusalem Arthur Penrhyn Stanley Sinai and Palestine p 210 or a place called by Eusebius Beta now El Birch eight Roman miles from Eleutheropolis now Beit Jibrin and possibly the same as the place of the same name described by Maundrell as four hours from Jerusalem and two hours west of Bethel or as Ewald thinks Beer beyond Jordan Numbers 21 16 see above The commentary concludes that it is impossible to decide which or whether any of these is the place designated as Jotham s place of refuge 37 Beer lahai roi edit Beer lahai roi or well of the Life which saw me is the name of a well in the Negev which is known for its appearance in a story in which God appears to Hagar 38 39 Later the Book of Genesis claims that Isaac stayed near it 40 Genesis locates this well in the wilderness of Beer sheba 41 on the way to Shur between Kadesh and Bered 42 38 Because the Beer in Beer lahai roi is simply the Hebrew word well the King James Version renders the whole expression the well Lahairoi The biblical references to it may place it somewhere in the vicinity of the modern Bir Asluj 43 Beeroth edit bȝ j rtw 44 45 in hieroglyphs Era New Kingdom 1550 1069 BC See Beeroth biblical city Beeroth Hebrew ב א רו ת in LXX Ancient Greek Bhrw8 is a minor city in Gibeon mentioned in Joshua 9 17 Maspero Petrie also Muller and Budge identify the place name Baertou mentioned in the Annals of Thutmose III at Temple of Karnak as biblical Beeroth 44 Beon edit Beon is a location mentioned only in Numbers 32 3 It may be a copying error for Meon 46 Bera edit An alternative name for Beer 47 Bered edit Bered is a location mentioned only in Genesis 16 14 which locates Hagar between Kadesh and Bered at the time of her meeting with an angel while pregnant Berothah edit Berothah is a place mentioned in passing in Ezekiel 47 16 Beth Anath edit A place mentioned in Judges 1 33 and situated in the tribal territory of Naphtali 48 Bethanath edit Bethanath Betharabah edit Betharabah Beth aram edit Beth aram Betharbel edit Betharbel Hosea 10 14 Beth aven edit Beth aven in Hosea 4 15 It Is opposed to Beth el 49 50 Beth azmaveth edit Beth azmaveth Beth barah edit A place mentioned in Judges 7 24 51 Beth birei edit Beth birei Beth Car edit Beth car Beth Car The point to which the Israelites drove back the Philistines following their raid on the Israelite assembly convened by Samuel at Mizpah recorded in 1 Samuel 7 5 12 52 Beth diblathaim edit Beth diblathaim Bethemek edit Bethemek Bether edit Bether Beth ezal edit Beth ezal Beth gader edit Beth gader Beth gamul edit Beth gamul Beth Jeshimoth edit Beth Jeshimoth Hebrew Beit ha Yeshimot was a town in the Transjordan which is mentioned in four verses of the Hebrew Bible Numbers 33 49 Joshua 12 3 and 13 20 and Ezekiel 25 9 Numbers mentions it in a description of where the Israelites encamped during their wilderness journeys According to Joshua 13 20 it was part of the land allocated to the Tribe of Reuben Ezekiel 25 9 lists it as one of three cities which constitute the glory of the country of Moab in a passage in which God promises to punish Moab During the First Jewish Roman War Beth Jeshimoth Bezemoth was captured by the Roman Imperial army and was used by them to resettle deserters who had joined the Roman ranks 53 The King James Version spells the name as Bethjesimoth and Bethjeshimoth Classical Greek sources Bezemoth Beth Jeshimoth is commonly identified with the village of Sweimeh in modern day Jordan 54 Beth Lebaoth edit Beth Lebaoth Beth lebaoth or Lebaoth is located in the Negev and in territory which according to the Book of Joshua was assigned to the Tribe of Simeon 55 56 Beth marcaboth edit Beth marcaboth Beth meon edit Beth meon Beth millo edit Beth millo 2 Kings 12 21 Beth Pelet edit Beth Pelet spelled Bethpalet and Bethphelet in the King James Version was a location in the territory assigned to the Tribe of Judah by Joshua 15 27 and was occupied by Judahites in Yehud Medinata following the return from the Babylonian captivity according to Nehemiah 11 26 Its location is not certain but may have been along the southern edge of Judah near the border with Edom 57 Beth pazzez edit Beth pazzez Beth Peor edit Beth Peor also transliterated as Bethpeor KJ21 Beth peor ASV Beth pe or RSV Beit P or CJB or Phogar Douai Rheims Bible is according to Deuteronomy 3 29 and Deuteronomy 4 46 the location opposite which the Israelites were camped after their victories over Sihon king of the Amorites and Og king of Bashan after their captured lands were allocated to the tribes of Reuben Gad and Manasseh 58 and where Moses delivered his sermon summarizing covenant history and the Ten Commandments in the narrative of the book of Deuteronomy 59 60 Beth phelet edit Beth phelet Beth rapha edit Beth rapha Bohan edit See Stone of Bohan C editCaleb ephrathah edit Caleb ephrathah or Caleb ephratah is a place mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 2 24 where it is said that Hezron died there 61 Camon edit Camon Kamon or Camoun was the place where the biblical judge Jair was buried Judges 10 5 It was a city of Gilead according to Josephus and in the opinion of the editors of the Pulpit Commentary Polybius mentions a Camoun among other trans Jordanic places but its site has not been verified by modern research 62 However Easton disagrees It has usually been supposed to have been a city of Gilead on the east of Jordan 63 Carem edit Carem appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua 13 14 Casiphia edit Casiphia or Kasiphia is a place name found only in Ezra 8 17 referring to an unknown location in Babylon 64 Ezra is recorded as having gotten Levites from Casiphia in order to serve in the temple of Jerusalem Cave of Makkedah edit See Makkedah Chephirah edit See Chephirah Chezib edit Chezib a Canaanite village where the sons of Judah were born thought to be Khirbet Ghazy now a ruin Culon edit Culon appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua 13 14 D editDiblah edit Diblah also called Diblath is a place name found in Ezekiel 6 14 65 It is probably a variant form of the name Riblah 66 67 Dilean edit Dilean is a place name found in Joshua 15 38 in a list of locations allotted to the tribe of Judah in the Shephelah The site is unknown but from the position of the town in the list it would appear to be somewhere north of Tel Lachish and Eglon 68 69 Dimonah edit Dimonah is a place listed in Joshua 15 22 as being inside the territory of Judah along its southern border with Edom It may be the same as Dibon 70 Dura edit The plain of Dura is a location mentioned in Daniel 3 1 as the place where the king of Babylon built an image of himself The location is uncertain as there were several places named Dura in the region 71 E editEglaim edit Eglaim is a Moabite city mentioned by Isaiah in his proclamation against Moab Isaiah 15 8 Its location is unknown Elealeh edit Elealeh was a Moabite town Every time it is mentioned in the Bible Heshbon is mentioned as well 72 The Book of Numbers assigns Elealeh to the Tribe of Reuben 73 Thomas Kelly Cheyne believed that where the present Hebrew text of Isaiah 15 8 reads Beer Elim the original likely read b Hebrew preposition in Elealeh 72 Today the location of the biblical Elealeh is called elʿAl 74 Eleph edit Eleph is the name given in Joshua 18 28 apparently for a town in the territory of the Tribe of Benjamin Because the name Eleph means thousand and because the form found in Joshua is in Hebrew ha eleph literally the thousand Thomas Kelly Cheyne believed there was an error in the text and that ha eleph was a copyist s mistake for either Taralah or Irpeel 75 Another understanding of the word is that it is part of a compound name for a town called Zela Haeleph instead of Zela and Eleph being two distinct towns as in the King James Version 76 Conder and Kitchener identified Eleph with Lifta 77 Elon beth hanan edit Elon beth hanan sometimes written Elonbethhanan Elonbeth hanan Elon Bethhanan etc is apparently the name of a place recorded in 1 Kings 4 9 1 Kings 4 asserts that Solomon king of Israel divided his kingdom into twelve administrative districts each with a governor responsible for delivering taxation from the region to the king The region assigned to a Ben Deker is recorded as including Makaz Shaalbim Beth shemesh and Elon beth hanan Instead of beth some manuscripts read ben the Hebrew word for son of yielding the reading Elon son of Hanan 78 Instead of Elon beth hanan the Septuagint reads and Elon as far as Beth hanan a reading endorsed as probably right by the Encyclopaedia Biblica although the Encyclopaedia expresses doubt as to whether Beth hanan is correct 78 Elon meonenim edit See Meonenim Eltolad edit Eltolad is a location in Canaan mentioned in the Book of Joshua Joshua 15 30 considers it a part of the territory of Judah in the Negev along the southern border with Edom but Joshua 19 4 treats it as part of the territory of the Tribe of Simeon 1 Chronicles 4 29 refers to it as Tolad 79 Enam edit Enam according to Joshua 15 34 was a town in the Shephelah of the Tribe of Judah It may be the same location as the Enaim where in the narrative found in the book of Genesis Tamar seduced the patriarch Judah 80 self published source 81 En eglaim edit En eglaim Eneglaim En Eglaim is a location mentioned in a vision of the prophet Ezekiel According to his vision the Dead Sea a salty lake in which fish cannot live would one day be filled with fresh water and fishers would cast their nets from Engedi to En eglaim 82 According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne 1899 a likely theory would be that the place referred to is near where the Jordan River empties into the Dead Sea resulting in the freshwater fish washed into the Dead Sea dying of the excessive salt content and washing up dead on the beach Cheyne suggested Ain Hajleh Ain Hajlah as a possible location thinking that the Hebrew Eglaim might be a later version in a text which originally read Hoglah as in the place name Beth hoglah 82 At present the exact location is still unidentified though proposals include Ain Hajlah Ain Feshka or Eglaim 83 En gannim edit En gannim is the name of two towns mentioned in the Hebrew Bible 84 A town in the Shephelah of Judah according to Joshua 15 34 A town in the territory of the Tribe of Issachar according to Joshua 19 21 See also Anem En haddah edit En haddah is a town mentioned only once in the Bible in Joshua 19 21 where it is assigned to the territory of the Tribe of Issachar Due to its placement in a list of towns it would appear to be close to En gannim which immediately precedes it 85 En hakkore edit En hakkore is the name of a fountain mentioned only in Judges 15 18 19 In the biblical narrative Samson the Israelite hero is thirsty and calls kara to God in fear that he will die of thirst In response God causes a spring to miraculously appear Samson memorializes the incident by naming the spring En Hakkore Hebrew for spring of the caller According to Encyclopaedia Biblica the original etymology of En hakkore is spring of the partridge while the meaning spring of the caller is a later legendary invention 86 Ephratha edit Ephratha Bethlehem from the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua 13 14 Esek edit Esek is the name of the first of two wells which according to Genesis were the object of an argument between Isaac and herdsmen from the Philistine city of Gerar 87 The Hebrew form of the name as preserved in the Masoretic Text is Esek while Greek Septuagint manuscripts have the forms Adikia or Sykophantia En shemesh edit En shemesh meaning fountain of the sun is the name of a place along the border between Judah and the Tribe of Benjamin between Ein Rogel and Adummim 88 89 Eshan edit Eshan Eshean is the name of a place in the hill country of the territory of the Tribe of Judah 90 The location has not been identified 91 Esora edit Esora is the King James Bible and Revised Version spelling of Aesora 11 See Aesora Eth kazin edit Eth kazin KJV Ittah kazin is the name of a place along the border of the territory of the Tribe of Zebulun according to Joshua 19 13 Ezel edit Ezel appears to be the name given to a cairn rock or milestone in a biblical story concerning David and Jonathan 1 Samuel 20 19 David the future king of Israel is a close friend of Jonathan the son of then king Saul Jonathan warns David that Saul may be seeking to kill him and instructs David to flee Jonathan instructs David to wait at the rock Ezel until Jonathan can understand Saul s intentions which he will then signal to David so that David can know whether to flee or stay in Saul s court According to some biblical critics the word Ezel is not a proper noun in Hebrew and is either a scribal mistake of some kind or a word which is not understood by biblical scholars 92 The Revised Standard Version refers to it as yonder stone heap 93 G editGaleed edit Galeed according to Genesis 31 47 48 is the name given by Jacob to the place where he and Laban reached a peace agreement The name is Hebrew for testimonial mound and is a reference to the pile of stones erected by Jacob and Laban as a memorial or witness of the agreement between the two relatives Laban called the stone Jegar Sahadutha the Aramaic equivalent of the Hebrew Galeed 94 Gallim edit Gallim is a biblical place name In the Masoretic Text of the Hebrew Bible Gallim is the name of one location while the Greek Septuagint contains two locations by that name In Isaiah 10 30 the village of Gallim is mentioned alongside Laishah Tel Dan and Anathoth placing it somewhere north of Jerusalem 95 Michal in 1 Samuel best known for being the wife of David was briefly the wife of Palti son of Laish a man identified as coming from Gallim 96 An additional Gallim or Galem is mentioned in the Septuagint text of 15 59a which contains additional cities assigned to the tribe of Judah which are not recorded in the Masoretic Text 95 97 Gath rimmon edit Gath rimmon the Levitical city from Joshua 19 45 Joshua 21 25 and 1 Chronicles 6 69 98 has been identified by Benjamin Mazar with Tel Gerisa 99 Anson Rainey supported the notion that it is identical with Gittaim and is to be found at or near Ramla 100 Gebim edit Gebim is a biblical place name which appears only in Isaiah 10 31 101 in which it is said that the inhabitants of Gebim gather themselves to flee The location of Gebim is unknown 102 Gederothaim edit Gederothaim is a place name which appears only in Joshua 15 36 in a list of locations possessed by the Tribe of Judah in the Shephelah 103 Because it appears immediately after the mention of Gederah some scholars have suggested that Gederothaim was introduced by a mistaken copying of the name Gederah 103 Geliloth edit Geliloth is a place name mentioned in Joshua 18 17 where it describes a location along the boundaries of the territory assigned to the Tribe of Benjamin The name means stone circles 104 Gibbar edit Gibbar is a district of Judah mentioned in a list of returnees from the Babylonian captivity where the list claims that 95 of the sons i e people of Gibbar returned 105 106 Ginath edit For the possible place name Ginath see List of biblical figures Ginath Gittaim edit Gittaim is a place name which appears several times in the Hebrew Bible According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne there were probably several Gittaims 107 A town called Gittaim in the territory of the Tribe of Benjamin appears in Nehemiah 11 33 108 A town called Gittaim is where the Beerothites were accepted as resident aliens according to 2 Samuel 4 3 109 Based on readings found in the Greek Septuagint Cheyne suggested that Gittaim is also probably the name of a town in or near Edom referred to in Genesis 36 35 and 1 Chronicles 1 46 where the Hebrew text now reads Avith 107 Anson Rainey also places Gath Gittaim Gath rimmon clearly different from Gath of the Philistines at or near Ramla 100 In the Septuagint 1 Samuel 14 33 contains a reference to a Gittaim Greek geththaim 110 although Cheyne believes the Septuagint s reading here to be a manifest error 107 Gur baal edit Gur baal is the name of a place mentioned in 2 Chronicles 26 7 According to the Chronicler it was inhabited by Arabians and was the object of a successful attack by Uzziah the king of Judah H editHabor edit Habor is the biblical name for the Khabur River which was in the wilderness of Judah and mentioned in 2 Kings 17 6 18 11 111 Hachilah edit The Hill of Hachilah is a place in the wilderness of Judah 112 It is mentioned in 1 Samuel 23 19 26 1 as a place where David hid from Saul 113 Hadad Rimmon edit See Zechariah 12 11 Rummanah Legio Maximianopolis Palestine Hadad Hadashah edit or ḥwdjsꜣtꜣ j or ḥwdꜣsꜣṯ 114 115 116 in hieroglyphs Era New Kingdom 1550 1069 BC Hadashah Hebrew ח ד ש ה in LXX Ancient Greek Ἀdasὰn mentioned only in once in the Bible in the Book of Joshua was a city in the valley of Judah 117 118 Its name means new 118 It is mentioned among the cities smitten by Ramesses III in his lists at the Temple of Karnak and the Mortuary Temple of Ramesses III at Medinet Habu as Houdasatha 114 115 116 Hali edit Hali is mentioned only in Joshua 19 25 in a list of cities assigned to the Tribe of Asher 119 120 Stanley Cook believed the name Hali may have been a scribal error for Helbah 120 Hammath edit Hammath was one of the fortified cities of Naphtali 121 Hammon edit Hammon is the name of two places in the Hebrew Bible 122 The first is along the borders of the Tribe of Asher 123 122 The second is a Levitical city inside the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali which is probably identical to Hammath and Hammoth dor 1 Chronicles 6 76 or verse 61 in some Bibles 122 Hammoth dor edit Hammoth dor was a Levitical city of Naphtali 124 See Hammoth dor Hamonah edit Hamonah is a city mentioned in Ezekiel s apocalyptic prophecy located according to the text as it now stands in the Valley of Hamon Gog 125 Thomas Kelly Cheyne expressed doubt as to whether the text originally read Hamonah suggesting that scribal error may have obscured a more original reading 126 Hapharaim edit Hapharaim or Haphraim is a town listed as being part of the territory of the Tribe of Issachar in the Book of Joshua 127 128 Hareth edit Hareth or Hereth is a forested area in Judah to which David and his family return after leaving refuge in Moab at the direction of the prophet Gad 129 It is thought to have been somewhere on the border of the Philistine plain in the southern part of Judah 130 Hazar addar edit Hazar addar is a name which appears only in Numbers 34 4 where it refers to a location on the southern edge of the territory belonging to the Tribe of Judah According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne the original text of Joshua 15 3 probably contained a reference to the place city 131 Hazar enan edit Hazar enan sometimes spelled Hazar Enan or Hazarenan is mentioned in Ezekiel 47 17 as a location along the northeastern edge of the land of Canaan according to Ezekiel s ideal borders 132 The Aramaic Targum Jonathan ben Uzziel on Numbers 34 9 10 renders its translation as ṭirath ʿenawatha walled suburb of the springs According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica Ezekiel 47 16 probably originally contained the name Hazar enan where it now contains Hazar hatticon 132 Hazar gaddah edit Hazar gaddah is a location listed in Joshua 15 27 as one of the cities along the southern border of Judah with Edom 133 Hazar shual edit Hazar shual was a city in the territory of the Tribe of Simeon along its border with Judah 134 135 Hazar susah edit Hazar susah also called Hazar susim is among the cities listed in the Book of Joshua as being part of the inheritance of the Tribe of Simeon 136 It is mentioned only in Joshua 19 5 and 1 Chronicles 4 13 136 Hazer hatticon edit Hazer hatticon is a location that appears on the northern border of the land of Canaan according to Ezekiel s idealized conception its borders 137 138 According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica the name is likely a miswritten form of Hazar enan 138 Hazor hadattah edit Hazor hadattah Aramaic for New Hazor was a place mentioned in Joshua 15 25 on the border between Judah and the Edom 139 Heleph edit Heleph as the Masoretic Text now stands appears to be the name of a place located in the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali 140 It appears only in Joshua 19 33 140 According to Thomas Kelly Cheyne the verse appears to have undergone copying errors and the word Heleph was probably not an original part of the verse 140 Helkath edit Helkath Hebrew ח ל ק ת is a location on the boundary of the tribe of Asher 141 Helkath hazzurim edit Helkath hazzurim a term which appears in 2 Samuel 2 16 is the name of a site where the troops of David fought the troops of Ish bosheth The location is described as Helkath hazzurim which is in Gibeon although Stanley A Cook suggested that the words which is in Gibeon were a later explanatory note added to the text and that the story may originally have been set in another location 142 Hena edit Hena is the name of a place or nation mentioned only in a single speech in the Hebrew Bible by the Rabshakeh an official of Sennacharib who mentioned it in threatening the Judahites in the time of king Hezekiah The Rabshakeh warned the Israelites that his employer the Assyrian Empire would defeat the kingdom of Judah and that the Israelites should not trust their deity to save them He supported his argument by pointing to other places conquered by the Assyrians and pointed out that the gods of those locations had not managed to prevent conquest Where is the king of Hamath and the king of Arpad and the king of the city of Sepharvaim of Hena and Ivvah 143 The locations of Hena and Ivvah are unknown to the present day 144 Thomas Kelly Cheyne suggested that the name Hena has found its way into the verse through a scribe s error 145 Hepher edit Hepher is a place name found in the Hebrew Bible In the conquest narratives of the Book of Joshua there is a list of 31 kings defeated by the invading Israelites 146 These kings are unnamed but referred to simply in terms of what town they ruled and a king of Hepher is listed among them in Joshua 12 17 Later in the narratives about Solomon Solomon divides his land into twelve districts each ruled by a governor in charge of collecting tribute The district assigned to the Ben Hesed included all the land of Hepher 147 In addition to these explicit references to a place known as Hepher there are veiled references to Hepher in etiological genealogical passages in which historical regions and ethnic groupings are described as if descended from a family tree populated by individual forefathers 148 In these narratives a person named Hepher is described as being a descendant of Manasseh indicating that Hepher was at some point ruled by people identified with the Tribe of Manasseh 149 148 The people of Hepher are identified as Hepherites in Numbers 26 32 The biblical mentions of Hepher are not enough to locate the town with any precision it is not even certain whether Hepher is to be found in the Transjordan or in Cisjordan 148 Heshmon edit Heshmon is the name of a town mentioned in Joshua 15 27 in a list of towns on the border between Judah and Edom The name Heshmon may be the basis for the term Hasmonean Hebrew hashmoni as the Hasmoneans may have had their origin in Heshmon 150 Holon edit This section is about the biblical towns named Holon For the modern town see Holon Holon Hilen Hilez is the name of two biblical towns A city in the hill country of Judah according to Joshua 15 21 and Joshua 21 15 151 but its site is unknown 152 It is also referred to as Hilen or Hilez in 1 Chronicles 6 58 verse 43 in some Bibles 153 A town in Moab mentioned in Jeremiah 48 21 at the head of a list of towns to be judged by God for Moab s misdeeds Horem edit Horem was one of the fortified cities of Naphtali according to Joshua 19 38 154 The exact location is unknown 155 Hosah edit ḫꜣṯꜣjj 156 157 in hieroglyphs Era New Kingdom 1550 1069 BC Hosah Hebrew ח ס ה according to Joshua 19 29 was a city on the border between the Tribe of Asher and Tyre 158 Where the Masoretic Text reads Hosah an important Greek Septuagint manuscript reads Iaseif leading to uncertainty about what the original reading was 158 The location is unknown but researchers are inclined towards Tell Rashidiyeh or Khirbet el Hos 159 today both in Lebanon one S of Tyre 160 the other South East of it 161 Hukkok edit Hukkok or Huquq was a town near Zebulun on the border of Naphtali 162 Many commentators have identified it with Yaquq 163 Humtah edit Humtah was a city of Judah according to Joshua 15 54 164 whose location has not been identified Its name in Hebrew means snail Hushah edit Hushah was a place in the hill country of Judah founded by a son of Ezer 1 Chronicles 4 4 It is generally identified with Husan south west of Bethlehem 165 One of David s Mighty Warriors is identified in the Bible as Sibbecai the Hushathite 166 I editIdalah edit Idalah is the name of a town in the territory of the Tribe of Zebulun according to Joshua 19 15 the only place in the Hebrew Bible where it is mentioned 167 Ijon edit ˁȝˁjnȝ 168 169 in hieroglyphs Era New Kingdom 1550 1069 BC Ijon Hebrew עי ו ן in LXX Ancient Greek Ain is the name of a place mentioned three times in the Hebrew Bible In 1 Kings 15 20 and the parallel passage in 2 Chronicles 16 4 along with Dan and Abel beth maacah Kings account Chronicles reads Abel maim it is conquered by Ben Hadad I of Aram during the time of Baasha of Israel c 900 to c 877 BCE In 2 Kings 15 29 Ijon along with Abel beth maacah and several other places are taken captive by Tiglath Pileser III reigned 745 727 BCE during the reign of Pekah It was slightly north of the modern day site of Metula 170 Budge and Paton equate Ijon with the hieroglyphic place name Aiina 169 Ijon is commonly identified with Tel Dibbine a tell near Marjayoun Lebanon 171 Iphtah edit Iphtah the King James Version spells it Jiphtah was according to Joshua 15 43 a place in the Shephelah of the Tribe of Judah The location is unknown today 172 Iphtah el edit Iphtah el the King James Version spells it Jiphtah el is the name of a place mentioned only in Joshua 19 14 and 19 27 173 Joshua describes it as being along the northern border of the Tribe of Zebulun in the area adjoining the territory of the Tribe of Asher The biblical Iphtah el is probably the place known today as Khirbet Japhet 174 Irpeel edit Irpeel is the name of a town mentioned only in Joshua 18 27 in the territory of the Tribe of Benjamin 175 Ithlah edit Ithlah King James Version Jethlah is a location which according to Joshua 19 42 was part of the territory of the Tribe of Dan The location has not been identified by modern scholarship 176 Ittah kazin edit See Eth kazin J editJabneel edit Jabneel once Jabneh is the name given in the Hebrew Bible for two locations The first is a Philistine city considered by Joshua 15 11 to have belonged to the territory of the Tribe of Judah 177 178 In 2 Chronicles 26 6 where the name is shortened to Jabneh it is recorded that Uzziah as part of his attacks on Philistine cities broke down its wall 178 The second is assigned by Joshua 19 33 to the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali Jahaz edit Jahaz or Jahaza Jahazah Jahzah Iahaz was the site of the battle between King Sihon and the advancing Israelite people according to Numbers 21 23 179 and later became a levitical city in the territory of Reuben east of the River Jordan 180 Jahaz is mentioned in both the Hebrew Testament Yahats Isaiah 16 4 Jeremiah 48 34 Yahatsah or Yahtsah Numbers 21 23 Deuteronomy 2 32 Joshua 13 18 Joshua 21 36 and the King James Version Jahazah Judges 11 20 Jeremiah 48 21 1 Chronicles 6 78 Jahzah and in the Mesha Stele Andre Lemaire places it somewhere along the northeast border of Moab 181 Janim edit Janim or Janum is a location mentioned only in Joshua 15 53 which places it in the hill country of Judah somewhere near Beth tappuah 182 Jearim edit Mount Jearim is mentioned in Joshua 15 10 a verse which described the northern border of the Tribe of Judah 183 According to the Encyclopaedia Biblica the term described in this case not a mountain in the modern sense of the word but a ridge and Jearim is probably an incorrect reading where Jarib or Ephron was originally intended 183 Jegar sahadutha edit See Galeed Jeruel edit The wilderness of Jeruel is the place where according to 2 Chronicles 20 16 Jahaziel told Jehoshaphat to expect an invading army of Moabites Ammonites and Edomites 184 Jethlah edit See Ithlah Jiphtah edit See Iphtah Jiphtah el edit See Iphtah el Jogbehah edit Jogbehah is a city east of the Jordan River mentioned in Numbers 32 35 as one of the locations in the Transjordan granted to the Tribe of Gad by Moses It reappears in the story of Gideon 185 It was probably an Ammonite fortress now named Rugm al Gubekha 186 Jokdeam edit Jokdeam is the name of a location mentioned only once in the Bible in Joshua 15 56 187 The passage identifies it as being in the hill country of Judah but beyond that its location is unknown today 188 K editKamon edit See Camon Kasiphia edit See Casiphia Kirjathjearim edit See Kiriath Jearim Kithlish edit Kithlish is a man s wall and town in the plain of Judah Joshua 15 40 It has been identified with Jelameh L editLaharoi edit See Beer lahai roi Lebaoth edit See Beth Lebaoth Lecah edit Lecah or Lekah is a place mentioned in 1 Chronicles 4 21 which claims that Er the son of Judah son of Jacob settled there Luhith edit The ascent of Luhith is a location in Moab mentioned in Isaiah 15 5 and Jeremiah 48 5 M editMahaneh Dan edit Mahaneh Dan or Mahaneh dan is a location associated with the tribe of Dan According to Judges 18 12 it was located to the west of Kirjath jearim 189 190 On the other hand Judges 13 25 names it as the place where Samson lived and where the spirit of the LORD began to stir in him but gives it a different location between Zorah and Eshtaol 191 190 Makaz edit Makaz is a location mentioned in 1 Kings 4 9 in a passage which describes king Solomon administering the kingdom of Israel by division into twelve districts Makaz appears in a list of cities the rest of which belonged to the territory traditionally assigned to the Tribe of Dan 192 so it appears likely that Makaz was originally intended as a reference to some location in Dan 193 Makkedah edit or m j ḳꜣtꜣ or mḳwtꜣ 194 195 in hieroglyphs Era New Kingdom 1550 1069 BC Makkedah Hebrew מ ק ד ה in LXX Ancient Greek Makhda or Maked as in 1 Maccabees in Vulgate Latin Mageth was a city in the land of Canaan Joshua 12 16 gives a list of thirty one cities whose kings according to the Book of Joshua were defeated in the conquest of Canaan following the Exodus and Makkedah is included 196 Joshua 15 41 locates it in the part of the Shephelah assigned to the Tribe of Judah 197 Joshua 10 relates a story of five Amorite kings hiding in the cave of Makkedah after a battle afterward they were removed from the cave and killed in a humiliating fashion After this Makkedah was captured 198 199 Maspero Muller and Budge identify Makouta mentioned in the Annals of Thutmose III at the Temple of Karnak with biblical Makkeda 194 195 Historical geographers have struggled with its modern identification with PEF surveyors Conder amp Kitchener thinking the ancient site to be where was once built the Arab village of el Mughar north of Nahal Sorek 200 Manocho edit Manocho appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua 13 14 Maon edit This entry is about the location known as Maon or the Wilderness of Maon For the ethnic group known by that name see List of minor biblical tribes Maon Maon according to Joshua 15 55 was a place in the highlands of the Tribe of Judah 201 identified in modern times with Khirbet Maʿin or in Hebrew Horvat Maʿon 202 According to 1 Samuel 23 24 the Wilderness of Maon in the plain on the south of Jeshimon was one of the places where David hid from King Saul 203 204 Nabal the rich but callous property owner who refused to support David s men in 1 Samuel 25 1 11 was from Maon 205 In the Septuagint version of 1 Samuel David retreated to the Wilderness of Maon after the death of Samuel 206 but in the Massoretic Text he went to the Wilderness of Paran Through the use of genealogy Maon was personified as a descendant of Hebron 207 There was an Arab village and there is now an Israeli settlement at Ma on Har Hebron in the West Bank Maralah edit Maralah is a place mentioned only in Joshua 19 11 where it describes a locality in the territory of the Tribe of Zebulun along its southwestern border 208 Masrekah edit Masrekah according to Genesis 36 36 and 1 Chronicles 1 47 is where the Edomite king Samlah lived Meah edit Meah is the name of a tower named in Nehemiah 3 1 and 12 39 Mejarcon edit Mejarcon also spelled Mejarkon or Me jarkon was a location on the border of the tribe of Dan 209 Meonenim edit Meonenim appears in Judges 9 37 in the Hebrew phrase elon meonenim which is variously translated as plain of Meonenim Elon meonenim oak of Meonenim or the Diviners Oak 210 211 Mephaath edit Mephaath was a levitical city of the Merarites lying in the district of the Mishor in the territory of the tribe of Reuben according to Joshua 21 37 212 and was mentioned in condemnation by the prophet Jeremiah in Jeremiah 48 21 213 Michmethath edit Michmethath Michmethah Mikmethath Micmethath is the name of a place mentioned in Joshua 16 6 and 17 7 16 6 records that it is along the north end of the territory of the Tribe of Ephraim 17 7 indicates that it was along the south end of the territory of the Tribe of Manasseh From the biblical description it would appear to have been southeast of Shechem 214 Middin edit The town of Middin is mentioned in passing in Joshua 15 61 in a list of six towns in the wilderness of the territory of the tribe of Judah 215 Its exact location is unknown 216 Migron edit There is a place called Migron on the outskirts of Gibeah mentioned in 1 Samuel 14 2 where King Saul was based 217 different from the Migron mentioned in Isaiah 10 28 which is north of Michmash 218 219 Minni edit Minni is mentioned in Jeremiah 51 27 as the name of a province in Armenia 220 which was at this time under the Median kings Armenia is regarded by some as Har minni i e the mountainous country of Minni 221 Minnith edit Minnith is mentioned in Judges 11 33 as marking the extent of Jephthah s victory over the Ammonites 222 and in Ezekiel 27 17 as a wheat farming city 223 Minnith Missouri takes its name from the reference in Ezekiel Misrephoth maim edit Misrephoth maim is the name of a place associated with Sidon where according to the Book of Joshua Joshua pursued the retreating Canaanites after a battle at Merom 224 225 According to Joshua 13 6 it is found near the boundary between the northern territory of the Tribes of Israel and the Sidonians 225 Mount Jearim edit See Jearim N editNeah edit Neah is a location mentioned only in Joshua 19 13 226 227 The Book of Joshua places it in the territory of the Tribe of Zebulun near the valley of Iphtah el 228 Neballat edit Neballat is the name of a town listed among the towns where people of the Tribe of Benjamin lived according to Nehemiah 11 34 229 230 Today it is known as Beit Nebala 231 Nibshan edit Nibshan is the name of a town in the wilderness of Judah mentioned only in Judges 15 62 No edit No or No amon is the name of a city in Egypt mentioned in negative terms by the prophets Jeremiah 46 25 Ezekiel 30 14 16 and Nahum 3 8 It is most commonly identified in modern scholarship with Thebes but in the Septuagint Vulgate and a variety of rabbinical commentators it is interpreted as Alexandria 232 233 P editParbar edit Parbar according to the King James Version is a place name mentioned in 1 Chronicles 26 18 in a description of the divisions of gatekeepers for the Temple in Jerusalem However in more recent scholarship the word parbar or parwar is generally taken not as a proper noun but as a common noun with various proposals as to its meaning Canadian academic Donna Runnalls suggests that it seems to refer to a structure which was located at the top of the road on the west side of the temple 234 The New Revised Standard Version translates the word as the colonnade on the west 235 Perez Uzzah edit Perez Uzzah Hebrew outburst against Uzzah 236 is a place name which appears only in the biblical narrative about Uzzah a man who was killed by God for touching the Ark of the Covenant 2 Samuel 6 8 1 Chronicles 13 11 David named it in commemoration of Uzzah s death The location has not been identified 237 Phagor edit Phagor Greek Fagὼr appears in the Septuagint version of the Book of Joshua 238 14 in a grouping of 11 cities of Judah not listed in the Hebrew text It is rendered as Peor in the Contemporary English Version 1995 239 Pul edit Pul a place name in Isaiah 66 19 in Hebrew may refer to Put or Phut 240 R editRabbith edit Rabbith according to Joshua 19 20 was a location within the territory of the Tribe of Issachar 241 Racal edit Racal or Rachal or Rakal according to 1 Samuel 30 29 was one of the locations were David sent plunder after defeating a group of Amalekites The site is unknown and mentioned nowhere else It may have been a copyist s error for Carmel 241 Rakkath edit nbsp Tel Rakat looking north over the Sea of Galilee Rakkath also Rakat or Rakkat is mentioned in Joshua 19 35 as a fenced or fortified city in the territory of the Tribe of Naphtali 242 and is considered according to Jewish tradition to be the location where the city of Tiberias was built from around 20 CE 243 It is identified by some with Tel Rakat Khirbet el Kaneitriyeh on PEF Survey of Palestine map Rakkon edit Rakkon according to the Masoretic Text of Judges 19 46 is a place name for a locality along the borders of the Tribe of Dan A common opinion is that the place name Rakkon Hebrew hrqwn originally through a mis copying of part of the previous place name Me Jarkon Hebrew my hyrqwn which is mentioned immediately preceding it 244 If it is a genuine place name its location is uncertain and it is unclear whether it refers to a town or a river 244 The Septuagint omits it altogether 245 Ramath Mizpeh edit Ramath Mizpeh according to Joshua 13 26 was a location in the territory of the Tribe of Gad a Transjordanian tribe It is possibly the same as present day Iraq al Amir 246 Rammath Lehi edit Rammath Lehi according to the Old Testament Book of Judges was the name given to this place by Samson when he defeated a thousand Philistines Ramat Negev edit A place named Ramat Negev Hebrew rmt ngb is assigned to the Tribe of Simeon by Joshua 19 8 It is likely the same as location as the Ramot Negev rmwt ngb in 1 Samuel 30 27 where it is named as a location to which David sent plunder from his raid against the Amalekites 241 Ramat or Ramot Negev is also mentioned in one of the Arad ostraca a series of letters recovered from Tel Arad ordering that soldiers be sent to Ramat Negev as protection against Edomite invasion 247 It is possible that Ramot Negev is the place now known as Hurvath Uza 248 See also Baalath Beer Rekem edit This is about the city For individuals of the same name see List of minor biblical figures Rekem Rekem is the name of a city or fortified town in the territory of the Tribe of Benjamin according to Joshua 18 27 The location is unknown 249 Rock of Escape edit See Sela Hammahlekoth Rogelim edit Rogelim is a place mentioned twice in 2 Samuel both times in relation to Barzillai the Gileadite It is identified as his city 17 27 and the place from which he came to meet King David after the revolt of Absalom 19 31 Its location was in Gilead but has not been precisely identified 250 Strong s Concordance calls is a place of fullers 251 Rumah edit Rumah or Ruma is a place name in the Hebrew Bible It is mentioned in 2 Kings 23 26 which identifies king Jehoiakim s mother as Zebudah the daughter of Pedaiah of Rumah A widespread but not unanimous identification sees this as the modern site of Ruma Tell Rumeh in the Lower Galilee 252 253 Joshua 15 52 lists a Rumah or Dumah depending on the manuscript followed as a city in the hill country of Judah 254 This is often associated with the modern village of Dume although scholars have expressed some uncertainty about this location as well 255 253 S editSalim edit A place name Salim appears in John 3 23 in the phrase Aenon of Salim The location has not been identified though several possibilities have been suggested 256 Sansannah edit Sansannah appears in Joshua 15 31 in a list of towns in the Negev of Judah Scholars equate it with the modern Kirbet esh Shamsaniyat although with some doubt 257 In Joshua 19 a portion of the territory of Judah is assigned to the Tribe of Simeon and in this list instead of Sansannah the text reads Hazar Susah verse 5 258 Sebam edit See Sibmah Secu edit Secu also Seku Sechu is a place name found in 1 Samuel 19 22 Its site has not been identified and it is mentioned nowhere else in the Bible 259 Sela Hammahlekoth edit Sela Hammahlekoth or Rock of Escape is the name which according to 1 Samuel 23 28 was given to a location where David narrowly escaped being killed by Saul The location has not been definitely identified but the biblical story places it in the Wilderness of Maon 260 Seneh edit Seneh is the name of one of two rocky cliffs the other being Bozez through which Jonathan had to pass during his attack against a Philistine garrison 1 Samuel 14 4 Shaalbim edit Shaalbim is the name of a location which appears twice in the form Shaalbim in the Hebrew Bible in Judges 3 5 and again in 1 Kings 4 9 The passage in Judges 1 discusses the situation after the death of Joshua in which the Tribe of Dan had difficulty expelling the Amorites from the land allotted to them and the Amorites forced the Danites to live in the hill country keeping the valley for themselves Judges 1 1 34 But the Amorites were resolved to dwell in Harheres in Aijalon and in Shaalbim yet the hand of the house of Joseph prevailed so that they became tributary And the border of the Amorites was from the ascent of Akrabbim from Sela and upward 261 1 Kings 4 records that Solomon divided his kingdom into districts under various governors and chose a man named Ben Deker as governor in Makaz and in Shaalbim and Beth shemesh and Elon beth hanan 262 In Joshua 19 42 a Shaalabbin is listed as a location within the territory allotted to Dan and it is thus likely to be the same as the location Shaalbim which Dan was unable to occupy 176 This is generally considered to have been located on the site of modern Salbit 176 263 It may also be the same as the location referred to as Shaalban 2 Samuel 23 32 1 Chronicles 11 33 and may have been the Shaalim of 1 Samuel 9 4 263 Shaalim edit Saul and his assistant passed through the land of Shaalim looking for his father s lost donkeys according to 1 Samuel 9 4 264 probably in the highlands of Ephraim Some manuscripts of the Septuagint locate the burial place of Abdon in Pirathon in the hill country of Ephraim in the land of Shaalim 265 although other versions read in the hill country of the Amalekites 266 Shamir edit This is about the biblical locations not the person mentioned in 1 Chronicles 24 24 Shamir is the name of a biblical place which according to Joshua 15 48 was found in the hill country of the Tribe of Judah According to Judges 10 1 2 the Israelite leader Tola lived died and was buried in a location called Shamir in the hill country of the Tribe of Ephraim Shaveh Kiriathaim edit According to Genesis 14 5 Chedorlaomer defeated the Emim at Shaveh Kiriathaim Shaveh Valley of edit A valley named Shaveh king s valley is the location where according to Genesis 14 17 the king of Sodom went to meet Abram after the defeat of the forces of Chedorlaomer Sibmah edit Sibmah Hebrew Sibmah is a location which according to Numbers 32 37 38 and Joshua 13 19 was in the territory of the Tribe of Reuben 267 In the King James Version it is sometimes spelled Shibmah Isaiah 16 7 8 refers to it as a Moabite city as does Jeremiah 48 31 32 In one case it is called Sebam 268 Hebrew Sebam spelled Shebam in the King James Version Numbers 32 3 Its specific location is not known 269 Stone of Bohan son of Reuben edit The stone of Bohan son of Reuben is mentioned in Joshua 15 6 as a point along the boundary of the land allocated to the tribe of Judah 270 Bohan is not named as one of Reuben s sons where they are listed in Genesis 46 9 271 Bohan is a name which appears twice in the Hebrew Bible 272 In both cases it appears in the phrase the stone of Bohan the son of Reuben which refers to a place along the boundary between Judah and the Tribe of Benjamin 273 Suphah edit Suphah is mentioned in Numbers 21 14 274 quoting the lost Book of the Wars of the Lord and is possibly the same as Suph T editTappuah edit Tappuah Hebrew for apple and compounds thereof are toponyms from the Book of Joshua Beth Tappuah city in the hill country of Judah Joshua 15 53 commonly identified with Taffuh a Palestinian town in the West Bank 4 miles west of Hebron Tappuah city in the lowland of Judah Joshua 12 17 15 34 Tappuah capital of a Canaanite king defeated by Joshua It was allotted to the powerful tribe of Ephraim who first needed to capture the city It stood in the eastern parts of its realm and on the border with Manasseh who received the lands around it Joshua 16 8 17 8 It is usually identified with Tell esh Sheikh Abu Zarad 8 miles 13 km south of Shechem and in the vicinity of modern Yasuf identified with the Yashub of LXX and possibly of the Samaria Ostraca 275 276 Pottery found at Sheikh Abu Zarad was dated to the Late Bronze and Iron Ages 276 Encyclopaedia Judaica sees En tappuah from Joshua 17 7 see below as being an alternative name for the city 276 A by now discarded identification with the site fortified by Bacchides was based on a misreading of Josephus Ant 13 15 Whiston Book 13 Ch 1 3 1 Maccabees 9 50 Bacchides fortified Theko Tekoa not Tepho Tappuah 276 En tappuah Tappuah Spring in the eastern parts of Manasseh on the border with Ephraim Joshua 17 7 identified with the Ayn al Tuffuḥ spring near the village of Yasuf 276 Considered to be an alternative name for the city of Tappuah in Efraim 276 Tiphsah city captured by King Mehahem2 Kings 15 16 In the Greek version though the city is named as Tappuah which would then be the one in Ephraim see above 275 Tatam edit Tatam appears in the Septuagint version of Joshua 15 59 60 14 Theco edit Theco appears in the Septuagint version of Joshua 15 59 60 14 Thether edit Thether appears in the Septuagint version of Joshua 15 59 60 14 Thobes edit Thobes appears in the Septuagint version of Joshua 15 59 60 14 U editUzzen sherah edit Uzzen sherah or Uzzen sheerah is the name of a town mentioned only in 1 Chronicles 7 24 277 It was named for its builder Sherah daughter of Ephraim While it is believed to have been located close to Beth horon the exact location has not been identified 278 W editWell Lahairoi the edit See Beer lahai roi Z editZaphon edit Zaphon Hebrew Tsaphonah rendered Sephenia in some manuscripts of the Septuagint 279 is mentioned in Joshua 13 27 as a location within the territory of the tribe of Gad 280 and in Judges 12 1 as the location where the Ephraimites met with Jephthah and his army to complain that Jephthah had fought the Ammonites without calling on the Ephraimites for military assistance 281 The Easy to Read Version calls it a city 282 Some translations e g the King James Version render Tsaphonah as northwards Zelzah edit A place at the border of Benjamin where two men were to meet Saul as a sign of his kingship in 1 Samuel 10 2 283 This is the only mention of the place in the Bible and its location is unidentified 284 Zereda edit Zereda h is the birthplace of Jeroboam the first king of the northern Kingdom of Israel and the son of Nebat of the Tribe of Ephraim 285 Ziz edit The ascent of Ziz is the place where according to 2 Chronicles 20 16 Jahaziel told Jehoshaphat to expect an invading army of Moabites Ammonites and Edomites to ascend in front of the wilderness of Jeruel 286 See also editCities in the Book of Joshua List of biblical places List of minor biblical figures List of minor biblical tribes List of modern names for biblical place namesReferences edit 2 Kings 5 12 Joshua 21 30 1 Chronicles 6 74 Joshua 3 16 Adam in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Joshua 15 22 a b Adadah in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Joshua 15 30 Adithaim in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Acts 27 27 W J Woodhouse Adria in Cheyne amp Black 1899 a b Aesora in Cheyne amp Black 1899 a b c Esora in Cheyne amp Black 1901 a b c d e Joshua 15 59 60 a b c d e f g h i j Anson Rainey 1982 Wine from the royal vineyards Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 245 Winter The American Schools of Oriental Research 57 62 p 59 doi 10 2307 1356528 JSTOR 1356528 S2CID 164003915 Ezra 8 15 21 31 a b Derek Kidner 2 April 2016 Ezra and Nehemiah InterVarsity Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 8308 9473 4 Barnes A Barnes Notes on Ezra 8 accessed 6 April 2020 Joshua 21 18 Joshua 19 26 a b Amad in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Joshua 15 26 Amam in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Joshua 19 19 Douglas amp Tenney 2011 pp 64 65 See the NIV Holman NET OJB CSB EXB MEV CEV and the Message For example the ESV KJV RV ASV JPS 1917 ESV NASB and NLT Mearah in Cheyne amp Black 1902 Daniel I Block 13 October 2009 Joshua Judges Ruth 1 amp 2 Samuel Zondervan p 173 ISBN 978 0 310 25574 1 Ashnah in Douglas amp Tenney 2011 p 130 Joshua 16 5 Douglas amp Tenney 2011 p 138 Richard D Nelson 1 August 1997 Joshua 1997 A Commentary Presbyterian Publishing Corporation p 285 ISBN 978 1 61164 509 5 Numbers 21 16 18 Douai Rheims Bible Judges 9 21 Matthew Poole s Commentary on Judges 9 accessed 30 October 2016 Pulpit Commentary on Judges 9 accessed 30 October 2016 a b Beer lahai roi in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Genesis 16 4 Genesis 24 62 25 11 Genesis 21 14 Genesis 16 7 14 Nadav Naʼaman 2005 Ancient Israel and Its Neighbors Interaction and Counteraction Eisenbrauns p 273 ISBN 978 1 57506 108 5 a b Gauthier Henri 1925 Dictionnaire des Noms Geographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hieroglyphiques Vol 2 p 2 Budge 1920 p 977 Holman Bible Dictionary 1991 Beon Judges 9 21 Judges 1 33 The term Aven Archived from the original on August 23 2008 The term Beth aven in the Old Testament Archived from the original on February 18 2014 Judges 7 24 1 Samuel 7 5 12 Josephus De Bello Judaico Wars of the Jews 4 7 6 4 437 Frumkin Amos Elitzur Yoel 2002 Historic Dead Sea Level Fluctuations Calibrated with Geological and Archaeological Evidence Quaternary Research 57 3 341 Bibcode 2002QuRes 57 334F doi 10 1006 qres 2002 2330 ISSN 0033 5894 S2CID 129375298 See Joshua 15 32 19 6 Beth lebaoth in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Freedman 2000 p 173 Deuteronomy 3 29 Deuteronomy 4 46 Deuteronomy 5 1 21 Conder C R Kitchener H H 1883 The Survey of Western Palestine Vol 3 The Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund pp 35 112 1 Chronicles 2 24 Pulpit Commentary on Judges 10 accessed 5 November 2016 Easton s Bible Dictionary Camon accessed 5 November 2016 Holman Bible Dictionary 1991 Casiphia Ezekiel 6 14 Keith W Carley 14 November 1974 The Book of the Prophet Ezekiel CUP Archive p 48 GGKEY LGKJ9RGUSCS The King James Version calls it Diblath while New International Version New American Standard Bible Holman Christian Standard Bible read Diblah It is emended to Riblah in the New Living Translation and New English Translation Dilean in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Douglas amp Tenney 2011 p 358 Dimonah in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Douglas amp Tenney 2011 p 378 a b Elealeh in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Numbers 32 3 37 Douglas amp Tenney 2011 p 399 Eleph in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Pitkanen 2010 p 316 Conder and Kitchener 1881 SWP III p 18 47 a b Elon beth hanan in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Eltolad in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Richard R Losch May 2013 All the Places in the Bible Xlibris Corporation p 597 ISBN 978 1 4836 2826 4 Enaim in Cheyne amp Black 1901 a b En eglaim in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Monica L W Brady in Freedman 2000 p 406 En gannim in Cheyne amp Black 1901 S A Cook En haddah in Cheyne amp Black 1901 En hakkore in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Genesis 26 20 On the location see Joshua 15 7 and 18 17 On the etymology and proposed locations see En shemesh in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 15 52 Tremper III Longman 1 August 2013 The Baker Illustrated Bible Dictionary Baker Books p 888 ISBN 978 1 4412 3886 3 T K Cheyne Ezel in Cheyne amp Black 1901 1 Samuel 20 19 T K Cheyne Galeed in Cheyne amp Black 1901 a b T K Cheyne Gallim in Cheyne amp Black 1901 1 Samuel 25 44 Most existing translations of the Hebrew Bible or Old Testament into English are based primarily on the Masoretic Text For a scholarly translation of the Septuagint into English see the New English Translation of the Septuagint For the Septuagint reading of Joshua 15 59a see this PDF on page 187 1 The name Iesous found in the PDF is the Greek equivalent of Joshua Joshua 19 45 Joshua 21 25 1 Chronicles 6 69 Negev Avraham Gibson Shimon Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land New York London 2001 p 195 ISBN 0 8264 1316 1 English a b Rainey Anson 1998 Review by Anson F Rainey Journal of the American Oriental Society 118 1 73 JSTOR 606301 T K Cheyne Gebim in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Nadav Naʼaman 2005 Ancient Israel and Its Neighbors Interaction and Counteraction Eisenbrauns p 353 ISBN 978 1 57506 108 5 a b Gederothaim in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Geliloth in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Ezra 2 20 Gibbar in Cheyne amp Black 1901 a b c T K Cheyne Gittaim in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Nehemiah 11 33 2 Samuel 4 3 1 Samuel 14 33 2 Kings 17 6 18 11 T K Cheyne Hachilah Hill of in Cheyne amp Black 1901 1 Samuel 23 19 26 1 a b Budge 1920 p 1021 a b Gauthier Henri 1927 Dictionnaire des Noms Geographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hieroglyphiques Vol 4 p 23 a b Gaston Maspero Daressy Georges ed Recueil de travaux relatifs a la philologie et a l archeologie egyptiennes et assyriennes pour servir de bulletin a la Mission Francaise du Caire Vol XX in French p 118 Retrieved 14 April 2020 Joshua 15 37 a b T K Cheyne Hadashah in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 19 25 a b S A Cook Hali in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 19 35 a b c T K Cheyne Hammon in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 19 28 Joshua 21 32 Ezekiel 39 16 T K Cheyne Hamonah in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 19 19 Hapharaim in Cheyne amp Black 1901 1 Samuel 22 5 McClintock and Strong Biblical Cyclopedia Forest T K Cheyne Hazar addar in Cheyne amp Black 1901 a b W R Smith and T K Cheyne Hazar enan in Cheyne amp Black 1901 T K Cheyne Hazar gaddah in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 15 28 Joshua 19 3 1 Chronicles 4 28 Nehemiah 11 27 T K Cheyne Hazar shual in Cheyne amp Black 1901 a b T K Cheyne Hazar susah in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Ezekiel 47 16 a b Hazar hatticon in Cheyne amp Black 1901 T K Cheyne Hazor hadattah in Cheyne amp Black 1901 a b c T K Cheyne Heleph in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 19 25 S A Cook Helkath hazzurim in Cheyne amp Black 1901 2 Kings 19 13 Revised Version The Rabshakeh s remarks are repeated in Isaiah 37 13 E Ray Clendenen Jeremy Royal Howard 1 August 2015 The Holman Illustrated Bible Commentary B amp H Publishing Group p 403 ISBN 978 0 8054 9930 8 T K Cheyne Hena in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 12 1 Kings 4 10 a b c Yohanan Aharoni 1 January 1979 The Land of the Bible A Historical Geography Westminster John Knox Press p 310 ISBN 978 0 664 24266 4 See Numbers 26 32 33 27 1 Joshua 17 2 3 Heshmon in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 15 21 Joshua 21 15 Holman Bible Dictionary 1991 Holon Holon in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Joshua 19 38 Douglas amp Tenney 2011 p 621 Budge 1920 p 1025 Gauthier 1927 p 164 a b T K Cheyne Hosah in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Pitkanen 2010 p 327 Tell Rachidiyeh modern identifications of places in the Bible www openbible info Retrieved 7 February 2024 Khirbet el Hos modern identifications of places in the Bible www openbible info Joshua 19 34 Woudstra Martin H 1981 The Book of Joshua Wm B Eerdmans p 291 ISBN 978 0 8028 2525 4 Joshua 15 54 Freedman 2000 p 620 1 Chronicles 11 29 1 Chronicles 27 11 T K Cheyne Idalah in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Budge 1920 p 967 a b Gauthier Henri 1925 Dictionnaire des Noms Geographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hieroglyphiques Vol 1 p 131 Freedman 2000 p 628 Marom Nimrod Bechar Shlomit Panitz Cohen Nava Mullins Robert A Yahalom Mack Naama August 2020 Faunal remains from Tel Abel Beth Maacah Social change in the late second millennium BCE Hula Valley Journal of Archaeological Science Reports 32 102394 Bibcode 2020JArSR 32j2394M doi 10 1016 j jasrep 2020 102394 ISSN 2352 409X S2CID 219480588 Woudstra 1981 p 249 T K Cheyne Jiphtah el in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Cooke G A 1990 1918 The Book of Joshua Cambridge University Press Archive p 176 GGKEY LGLXENDA9WK T K Cheyne Irpeel in Cheyne amp Black 1901 a b c Pitkanen 2010 p 330 Joshua 15 11 a b T K Cheyne Jabneel in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Numbers 21 23 Joshua 13 18 Lemaire Andre 2007 The Mesha Stele and the Omri Dynasty In Lester L Grabbe ed Ahab Agonistes The Rise and Fall of the Omri Dynasty p 141 Janum in Cheyne amp Black 1901 a b Jearim Mount in Cheyne amp Black 1901 2 Chronicles 20 16 Judges 8 11 Joseph Coleson Lawson G Stone Jason Driesbach 2012 Joshua Judges Ruth Tyndale House Publishers p 293 ISBN 978 0 8423 3429 7 T K Cheyne Jokdeam in Cheyne amp Black 1901 Pitkanen 2010 p 295 Judges 18 12 a b S A Cook Mahaneh dan in Cheyne amp Black 1902 Judges 13 25 1 Kings 4 9 T K Cheyne Makaz in Cheyne amp Black 1902 a b Gauthier Henri 1926 Dictionnaire des Noms Geographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hieroglyphiques Vol 3 p 19 a b Budge 1920 p 998 Joshua 12 16 Joshua 15 41 10 21 T K Cheyne Makkedah in Cheyne amp Black 1902 Conder C R Kitchener H H 1882 The Survey of Western Palestine Memoirs of the Topography Orography Hydrography and Archaeology Vol 2 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund pp 411 412 Joshua 15 55 Jodi Magness The Archaeology of the Early Islamic Settlement in Palestine Eisenbrauns 2003 Vol 1 pp 96 97 1 Samuel 23 24 T K Cheyne Maon in Cheyne amp Black 1902 1 Samuel 25 1 11 1 Samuel 25 1 in Brenton s Septuagint Translation 1 Chronicles 2 45 T K Cheyne Maralah in Cheyne amp Black 1902 Joshua 19 46 T K Cheyne Meonenim in Cheyne amp Black 1902 For plain of Meonenim see KJV For Elon meonenim see the Jewish Publication Society translation of 1917 For oak of Meonenim see the Revised Version For Diviners Oak see English Standard Version Joshua 21 37 Jeremiah 48 21 Liverani Mario Amarna Mikmate Biblical Michmethath Zeitschrift Des Deutschen Palastina Vereins vol 114 no 2 1998 pp 137 138 www jstor org stable 27931587 Joshua 15 61 Yohanan Aharoni 1 January 1979 The Land of the Bible A Historical Geography Westminster John Knox Press p 356 ISBN 978 0 664 24266 4 1 Samuel 14 2 Isaiah 10 28 Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 Samuel 14 accessed 6 May 2017 Jeremiah 51 27 Easton s Bible Dictionary Minni accessed 7 November 2016 Judges 11 33 Ezekiel 27 17 Joshua 11 8 a b T K Cheyne Misrephoth maim in Cheyne amp Black 1902 Joshua 19 13 Neah in Cheyne amp Black 1902 Joshua 19 10 16 Nehemiah 11 34 Neballat in Cheyne amp Black 1902 Chad Brand Archie England Charles W Draper 1 October 2003 Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary B amp H Publishing Group p 1618 ISBN 978 1 4336 6978 1 Laurel Lanner 24 May 2006 Who Will Lament Her The Feminine and the Fantastic in the Book of Nahum Bloomsbury Publishing p 154 ISBN 978 0 567 54397 4 Huddlestun John R 2003 Nahum Nineveh and the Nile The Description of Thebes in Nahum 3 8 9 Journal of Near Eastern Studies 62 2 97 110 doi 10 1086 376364 JSTOR 10 1086 376364 S2CID 14130054 Runnalls Donna 1991 The Parwar A Place of Ritual Separation Vetus Testamentum 41 3 324 331 doi 10 2307 1519072 JSTOR 1519072 1 Chronicles 26 18 Joze Krasovec 8 March 2010 The Transformation of Biblical Proper Names A amp C Black p 40 ISBN 978 0 567 45224 5 Peter R Ackroyd 8 December 1977 The Second Book of Samuel Cambridge University Press p 245 ISBN 978 0 521 09754 3 Joshua 15 59 Joshua 15 59 CEV Skinner J 1898 Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on Isaiah 66 accessed 22 August 2022 a b c Ronald F Youngblood 7 March 2017 1 and 2 Samuel Zondervan p 469 ISBN 978 0 310 53179 1 Joshua 19 35 Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on Joshua 19 accessed 27 March 2016 a b Pitkanen 2010 p 331 Cooke 1990 p 186 T Desmond Alexander David W Baker 13 January 2003 Dictionary of the Old Testament Pentateuch A Compendium of Contemporary Biblical Scholarship InterVarsity Press p 345 ISBN 978 0 8308 1781 8 Baruch Halpern Andre Lemaire 7 July 2010 The Books of Kings Sources Composition Historiography and Reception BRILL p 238 ISBN 978 90 474 3073 5 Samuel Rocca 20 October 2012 The Fortifications of Ancient Israel and Judah 1200 586 BC Bloomsbury Publishing p 45 ISBN 978 1 84908 256 3 Woudstra 1981 p 225 Douglas amp Tenney 2011 p 1245 Strong s Concordance Rogelim Elitzur Yoel 1994 Rumah in Judah Israel Exploration Journal 44 1 2 127 JSTOR 27926337 a b Zvi Gal 1992 Lower Galilee During the Iron Age Eisenbrauns p 109 ISBN 978 0 931464 69 0 Elitzur 1994 pp 125 6 Elitzur 1994 p 123 James H Charlesworth 28 July 2006 Jesus and Archaeology Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 555 ISBN 978 0 8028 4880 2 Pekka Pitkanen calls the identification probably fairly uncertain Pitkanen 2010 p 291 Richard D Nelson 1 August 1997 Joshua 1997 A Commentary Presbyterian Publishing Corporation p 220 ISBN 978 1 61164 509 5 David Toshio Tsumura 15 March 2007 The First Book of Smauel Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 498 ISBN 978 0 8028 2359 5 Douglas amp Tenney 2011 p 1307 Judges 1 35 36 Jewish Publication Society translation of 1917 1 Kings 4 9 Jewish Publication Society translation of 1917 a b Eric F Mason Shaalbim in Freedman 2000 p 1193 1 Samuel 9 4 Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on Judges 12 accessed 11 April 2018 Judges 12 15 Numbers 32 37 38 Joshua 13 19NKJV M Jack Suggs Katharine Doob Sakenfeld James R Mueller 12 March 1992 The Oxford Study Bible Revised English Bible with Apocrypha OUP USA p 176 ISBN 978 0 19 529000 4 Ernest W Nicholson 8 May 1975 The Book of the Prophet Jeremiah Chapters 26 52 Cambridge University Press p 246 ISBN 978 0 521 09867 0 Joshua 15 6 Genesis 46 9 Joshua 15 6 18 17 Bohan in Cheyne amp Black 1899 Numbers 21 14 a b Wigoder Geoffrey ed 2005 Tappuah 3 The Illustrated Dictionary and Concordance of the Bible revised ed New York Sterling Publishing pp 930 931 ISBN 1 4027 2820 4 A Canaanite kingdom centered around the city of the same name that was conquered by Joshua The city itself was assigned to the tribe of Ephraim while its lands were allotted to Manasseh The location is probably modern Sheikh Abu Zarad 8 miles 13 km south of Shechem Josh 12 17 16 8 17 8 a b c d e f Tappuah in Encyclopaedia Judaica The Gale Group 2007 edition Referencing F M Abel 1936 RB 45 pp 103ff Via Jewish Virtual Library Accessed 21 Feb 2024 1 Chronicles 7 24 Eunice Riedel 1981 The book of the Bible Bantam Books p 505 ISBN 978 0 553 14649 3 Ellicott s Commentary for Modern Readers on Judges 12 accessed 9 November 2016 Joshua 13 27 Judges 12 1 Judges 21 1 Easy to Read Version 1 Samuel 10 2 Cohen A Ed Samuel Soncino Books of the Bible p 52 1Kings 11 26 2 Chronicles 20 16 General references edit Budge E A Wallis 1920 An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary Vol II London John Murray Cheyne T K Black J S eds 1899 Encyclopaedia Biblica Vol 1 A D Toronto George N Morang and Company Cheyne T K Black J S eds 1901 Encyclopaedia Biblica Vol 2 E K New York The Macmillan Company Cheyne T K Black J S eds 1902 Encyclopaedia Biblica Vol 3 L P Toronto George N Morang and Company Cheyne T K Black J S eds 1903 Encyclopaedia Biblica Vol 4 Q Z Toronto George N Morang and Company Douglas J D Tenney Merrill C 2011 Zondervan Illustrated Bible Dictionary Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 310 49235 1 Freedman David Noel ed 2000 Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Amsterdam University Press p 173 ISBN 978 90 5356 503 2 Pitkanen Pekka 2010 Joshua InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 2506 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of minor biblical places amp oldid 1215976144 Hareth, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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