The Book Of The Beerejected Scriptures

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886. Beerothi -- inhab. of Beeroth
... Beerothite. Word Origin from Beeroth Definition inhab. of Beeroth NASB Word
Usage Beerothite (4), Beerothites (1). Beerothite. Patrial ...
/hebrew/886.htm - 6k

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Thesaurus
Beerothites (1 Occurrence)
... Multi-Version Concordance Beerothites (1 Occurrence). 2 Samuel 4:3 and the Search the scriptures bookBeerothites
fled to Gittaim, and have lived as foreigners there until this day). ...
/b/beerothites.htm - 6k

Gittaim (2 Occurrences)
... Easton's Bible Dictionary Two wine-presses, (2 Samuel 4:3; Nehemiah 11:33), a
town probably in Benjamin to which the Beerothites fled. Int. ...
/g/gittaim.htm - 7k

Beeroth (7 Occurrences)
... in deceiving Israel, and in making a covenant with them (Joshua 9:3). Apparently
they were Hivites (Joshua 9:7). The occasion on which the Beerothites fled to ...
/b/beeroth.htm - 11k

Be-er'othites (1 Occurrence)
Be-er'othites. Beerothites, Be-er'othites. Beersheba . ... 2 Samuel 4:3 and the
Beerothites fled to Gittaim, and have lived as foreigners there until this day). ...
/b/be-er'othites.htm - 6k

Gitta'im (1 Occurrence)
... Multi-Version Concordance Gitta'im (1 Occurrence). 2 Samuel 4:3 and the Beerothites
fled to Gittaim, and have been sojourners there until this day. (See RSV). ...
/g/gitta'im.htm - 6k

Rechab (13 Occurrences)
... execution (2 Samuel 4:9-12), as in the case of the Amalekite, who asserted that
he had killed Saul (2 Samuel 1). For some reason the Beerothites left their own ...
/r/rechab.htm - 15k

Rechabites (4 Occurrences)
... execution (2 Samuel 4:9-12), as in the case of the Amalekite, who asserted that
he had killed Saul (2 Samuel 1). For some reason the Beerothites left their own ...
/r/rechabites.htm - 13k

Be-er'othite (2 Occurrences)
Be-er'othite. Beerothite, Be-er'othite. Beerothites . Multi-Version Concordance ...
Beerothite, Be-er'othite. Beerothites . Reference Bible.
/b/be-er'othite.htm - 7k

Sojourners (37 Occurrences)
... (ASV RSV). 2 Samuel 4:3 And the Beerothites fled to Gittaim, and were sojourners
there until this day.) (KJV JPS ASV DBY WBS YLT RSV). ...
/s/sojourners.htm - 18k

Foreigners (76 Occurrences)
... DBY NAS RSV). 2 Samuel 4:3 and the Beerothites fled to Gittaim, and have
lived as foreigners there until this day). (WEB). 2 Samuel ...
/f/foreigners.htm - 29k

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Coordinates: 31°49′56″N35°09′07″E / 31.83222°N 35.15194°E

bȝ(j)rtw[1][2]
in hieroglyphs

Beeroth (Hebrew: בְּאֵרוֹת‎; Be'erot, lit. 'wells'; in LXXAncient Greek: Βηρωθ) was a Biblical city seven miles northwest of Jerusalem.[3] The city was an ancient Hivite settlement, and is mentioned in Joshua 9:17, 18:25, 2 Samuel 4:2-3, Ezra 2:25 and Nehemiah 7:29. Another town named Beeroth is mentioned in Deuteronomy 10:6.

Because there are no known ruins for Beeroth, the location of the city is disputed. The most noted source materials are the texts of the Bible, the Onomastikon of Eusebius,[4] the annotations of this same text by Jerome, and the Madaba Map[5] The distance Eusebius gives puts Beeroth somewhere between modern Biddu and Nebi Samwil. The city was part of an Hivite confederacy under the apparent rule of Gibeon, 'a royal city' that sued for peace after the Hebrews destroyed Jericho and Ai as described in Joshua 9. Later much of the area taken in this initial campaign (including Beeroth) was given to Benjamin as inheritance in Joshua 18. Beeroth may have been the place to which Gideon's youngest son, Joatham or Jotham, fled to escape from Abimelech after his 69 brothers had been killed (Judges 9:21).[6]

The town was then inhabited until the Babylonian captivity in 586 BCE, and the people of this town returned to the area 70 years later as referenced in Ezra and Nehemiah. Whether they re-built and inhabited the town is not described in the text.

Although the most accepted modern location for Beeroth is Al-Bireh,[1] new evidence suggests that it may be modern Biddu, or slightly east of Biddu.

See also[edit]

The Book Of The Beerejected Scriptures Verse

References[edit]

  1. ^ abGauthier, Henri (1925). Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques Vol. 2. p. 2.
  2. ^Wallis Budge, E. A. (1920). An Egyptian hieroglyphic dictionary: with an index of English words, king list and geological list with indexes, list of hieroglyphic characters, coptic and semitic alphabets, etc. Vol II. John Murray. p. 977.
  3. ^Locating Biblical Bethel Correctly - Part II
  4. ^Onomastikon of Eusebius
  5. ^Madaba Map
  6. ^Pulpit Commentary on Judges 9, accessed 30 October 2016

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