Berothah
Fausset's Bible Dictionary [1]
BEROTHAI or BEROTHAH. (See BEROTHAI.)
Holman Bible Dictionary [2]
Ezekiel 47:16
Morrish Bible Dictionary [3]
Place mentioned as a north border of the land when it will again be inhabited by the twelve tribes. Ezekiel 47:16 . Supposed by some to be Beyrout.[Beirut]
Smith's Bible Dictionary [4]
Bero'thah. (toward the wells). and Bero'-tha-i. (my wells). The first of these two names, Berothah, is given by Ezekiel, Ezekiel 47:16, in connection with Hahlath and Damascus as forming part of the northern boundary of the Promised Land. The second of these two names, Berothai, is mentioned, 2 Samuel 8:8, in the same connection. The well-known city Beirut (Berytus), naturally suggests itself as identical with one at least of the names; but in each instance, the circumstances of the case seem to require a position farther east. They were probably in the vicinity of the springs near the present Hasbeya.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [5]
bē̇ -rō´tha ( Ezekiel 47:16 : בּרותה , bērōthāh ; Septuagint Codex Vaticanus, Ἀβθηρά , Abthērá ; or Berothai 2 Samuel 8:8; בּרתי , bērōthai , where for מבּרתי rof ere , mibbērōthai Septuagint reads ek tō̇n eklektō̇n póleōn , "from the select cities"): Probably two forms of the same name. Ezekiel 47:16 places it on the ideal northern frontier of Israel, between Damascus and Hamath. According to 2 Samuel 8:8 it was a city of Hadadezer, king of Zobah. In the parallel passage ( 1 Chronicles 18:8 ) Cun is given in place of Berothai. Its site is unknown. Ewald connected it with Beirût (so also apparently H. P. Smith, ICC , "Samuel," 307), but Ezekiel's description excludes this view. Others have sought it in the Wady Brissa, in the East slope of Lebanon, North of Baalbec. A more plausible conjecture identifies it with Bereitān ( Brithēn ), a village somewhat South of Baalbec (Baedeker, Pal 3, 369). Possibly, however, the ideal northern frontier line should be drawn farther south. See Hethlon; Zedad; Zobah .
Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [6]
(Heb, id. בֵּרוֹתָה, as if meaning " to Beroth," or toward the wells; Sept. in most copies has a mass of undistinguishable names, but some read Βηρωθά or Βηρωθάμ; Vulg. Berotha).
References
- ↑ Berothah from Fausset's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Berothah from Holman Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Berothah from Morrish Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Berothah from Smith's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Berothah from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
- ↑ Berothah from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature