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ZAANAIM
- ISBE
- A.T.S.
- Easton
- Hitchcock
- Nave
- Smith (1896)
- TCR
- Torrey
| The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (ISBE) James Orr, M.A., D.D., General Editor - 1915 |
| American Tract Society Bible Dictionary New York, American Tract society [c1859], Rand, W. W. (William Wilberforce), 1816-1909, ed. |
ZAANAIM: za-a-na'-im. See ZAANANNIM.
| Easton Bible Dictionary M.G. Easton M.A., D.D., published by Thomas Nelson, 1897. |
ZAANAIM: wanderings; the unloading of tents, so called probably from the fact of nomads in tents encamping amid the cities and villages of that region, a place in the north-west of Lake Merom, near Kedesh, in Naphtali. Here Sisera was slain by Jael, "the wife of Heber the Kenite," who had pitched his tent in the "plain [R.V., 'as far as the oak'] of Zaanaim" (Judg. 4:11). It has been, however, suggested by some that, following the LXX. and the Talmud, the letter b, which in Hebrew means "in," should be taken as a part of the word following, and the phrase would then be "unto the oak of Bitzanaim," a place which has been identified with the ruins of Bessum, about half-way between Tiberias and Mount Tabor.
ZAANAIM: -Also called ZAANANNIM -A plain near Kedesh #Jos 19:33; Jud 4:11
| Smith's Bible Dictionary (1896) |
ZAANAIM: (removings), The plain of, or more accurately, "the oak by Zaanaim," a tree-probably a sacred tree --mentioned as marking the spot near which Heber the Kenite was encamped when Sisera took refuge in his tent. (jud 4:11) Its situation is defined as "near Kedesh," i.e. Kedesh-naphtali, the name of which still lingers on the high ground north of Safed and two or three miles west of the lake of el-Huleh (waters of Merom). This whole region abounds in oaks.
| The New Topical Textbook Rev. R.A. Torrey- 1897 edition. |