Raama
Raama [1]
rā´a - ma ( רעמא , ra‛mā' ): Thus spelled only in 1 Chronicles 1:9; elsewhere "Raamah" ( רעמה , ra‛māh ). A son of Cush and father of Sheba and Dedan ( Genesis 10:7 = 1 Chronicles 1:9 ). In Ezekiel's lament over Tyre ( Ezekiel 27:22 ) the tribe of Raamah is mentioned along with Sheba as a mercantile people who provided the inhabitants of Tyre with spices, precious stones and gold. It has generally been identified with Regina, mentioned by Ptolemy and Steph. Byzantr. as a city in Southeastern Arabia on the shores of the Persian Gulf. The Septuagint ( Ῥεγμά , Rhegmá ) itself supposes this site. But the Arabic name of the city here indicated is spelled with a g and so gives rise to a phonological difficulty. A more probable identification has been found in the Sabean ra‛māh in Southwestern Arabia near Me‛ı̄n in the north of Marib. Me‛ı̄n was the capital of the old Minaean kingdom.