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Difference between revisions of "Dalmanutha"

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== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_69936" /> ==
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_69936" /> ==
<p> [[Dalmanutha]] (''Dăl-M'' ''Â'Nü'Thah'' ). A town on the sea of Galilee, near Magdala, in R. V. Magadan, &nbsp;Mark 8:10; &nbsp;Matthew 15:39; probably at ''ʾAin-El-Bârideh,'' on the west side of the sea, two miles from Tiberias, where are ruins. </p>
<p> [[Dalmanutha]] ( ''Dăl-M'' ''Â'Nü'Thah'' ). A town on the sea of Galilee, near Magdala, in R. V. Magadan, &nbsp;Mark 8:10; &nbsp;Matthew 15:39; probably at ''ʾAin-El-Bârideh,'' on the west side of the sea, two miles from Tiberias, where are ruins. </p>
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_50533" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_50533" /> ==
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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_36372" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_36372" /> ==
<p> (Δαλμανουθά, deriv. unknown, unless [as suggested by Lightfoot,' ''Hor. Hebr.'' p. 555; comp. Simonis ''Onom'' . p. 51] for the [[Zalmon]] , עלמון, a town mentioned in the [[Talmud]] as lying near Tiberias), a place mentioned only in &nbsp;Mark 8:10, where we read that Jesus, after feeding the multitude in the Decapolis, east of the Sea of Galilee, took a boat and "came into the regions (εἰς τὰ μέρη ) of Dalmanutha;" while the parallel passage (&nbsp;Matthew 15:39) states that he "came into the borders of Magdala." From this we may conclude that Dalmanutha was a town on the west side of the lake near Magdala. The latter stood close upon the shore, at the southern end of the little plain of Gennesaret, at the present Mejdel. (See Magdala). </p> <p> Immediately south of it a precipitous hill juts out into the sea. Beyond this, about a mile from Magdala, a narrow glen breaks down from the west. At its mouth are some cultivated fields and gardens, amid which, just by the beach, are several copious fountains, surrounded by heavy ancient walls and the ruins of a village. The place is called ''‘ [[Ain]] El-Barideh'' , "the cold fountain" (Robinson, ''Res'' . 3, 27), and has, with great probability, been thought to be the site of Dalmanutha (Porter, in Smith and Kitto, s.v.; Tristram, ''Land Of Israel'' , p. 429). (See [[Capernaum]]). Thomson thinks it may be the present ruined site called Dalhamia, on the river south of the lake, although he admits this seems too far from Magdala (''Land And Book'' , 2:60). Schwarz (Palest. p. 189) finds it in the "cave of Telimnan" (תלימאן ), mentioned in the Talmud, situated probably in the cliffs above Mejdel (Van de Velde, ''Memoir'' , p. 334), which, he learns, was also called ''Talmanuta'' . </p>
<p> ( '''''Δαλμανουθά''''' , deriv. unknown, unless [as suggested by Lightfoot,' ''Hor. Hebr.'' p. 555; comp. Simonis ''Onom'' . p. 51] for the [[Zalmon]] , '''''עלמון''''' , a town mentioned in the [[Talmud]] as lying near Tiberias), a place mentioned only in &nbsp;Mark 8:10, where we read that Jesus, after feeding the multitude in the Decapolis, east of the Sea of Galilee, took a boat and "came into the regions ( '''''Εἰς''''' '''''Τὰ''''' '''''Μέρη''''' ) of Dalmanutha;" while the parallel passage (&nbsp;Matthew 15:39) states that he "came into the borders of Magdala." From this we may conclude that Dalmanutha was a town on the west side of the lake near Magdala. The latter stood close upon the shore, at the southern end of the little plain of Gennesaret, at the present Mejdel. (See Magdala). </p> <p> Immediately south of it a precipitous hill juts out into the sea. Beyond this, about a mile from Magdala, a narrow glen breaks down from the west. At its mouth are some cultivated fields and gardens, amid which, just by the beach, are several copious fountains, surrounded by heavy ancient walls and the ruins of a village. The place is called '' '''''‘''''' [[Ain]] El-Barideh'' , "the cold fountain" (Robinson, ''Res'' . 3, 27), and has, with great probability, been thought to be the site of Dalmanutha (Porter, in Smith and Kitto, s.v.; Tristram, ''Land Of Israel'' , p. 429). (See [[Capernaum]]). Thomson thinks it may be the present ruined site called Dalhamia, on the river south of the lake, although he admits this seems too far from Magdala ( ''Land And Book'' , 2:60). Schwarz (Palest. p. 189) finds it in the "cave of Telimnan" ( '''''תלימאן''''' ), mentioned in the Talmud, situated probably in the cliffs above Mejdel (Van de Velde, ''Memoir'' , p. 334), which, he learns, was also called ''Talmanuta'' . </p>
          
          
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_2881" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_2881" /> ==
<p> '''''dal''''' -'''''ma''''' -'''''nū´tha''''' . See Magadan . Compare &nbsp;Mark 8:10; &nbsp;Matthew 15:39 . </p>
<p> ''''' dal ''''' - ''''' ma ''''' - ''''' nū´tha ''''' . See Magadan . Compare &nbsp;Mark 8:10; &nbsp;Matthew 15:39 . </p>
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15451" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15451" /> ==