Anim
Easton's Bible Dictionary [1]
Joshua 15:50
Fausset's Bible Dictionary [2]
A city in the mountains of Judah ( Joshua 15:50). Derived from Ainain, "the two springs," perhaps at Khirbet el Jif, near Khirbet el Dilbeh, the site of Achsah's upper and lower springs (Conder, Pal. Expl.).
Holman Bible Dictionary [3]
Joshua 15:50
Hitchcock's Bible Names [4]
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [5]
ANIM ( Joshua 15:60 only). A town of Judah, in the mountains near Eshtemoh. It seems probable that it is the present double ruin of Ghuwein , west of Eshtemoh.
Morrish Bible Dictionary [6]
City of Judah in the mountains. Joshua 15:50 . Identified with Ghuwein 31 21' N, 35 3' E .
Smith's Bible Dictionary [7]
A'nim. (fountains). A city in the mountains of Judah, named with Eshtemoh and Goshen. Joshua 15:50.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [8]
ā´nim ( ענים , ‛ānı̄m , "springs"): One of the cities of the hill country of Judah mentioned immediately after Eshtemoa ( Joshua 15:50 ). It is probably represented by the double ruin of el Ghuwein situated South of es Semu‛a . The surface remains are Byzantine - a Christian town called Anem was here in the 4th century, but it is clearly an ancient site of importance ( PEF , III, 408, Sh, Xxv ).
Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [9]
(Heb., Anim', עָנִים, fountains; comp. AEnon; Sept. Ἀείμ v. r. Αἰσάμ ) , a city in the mountains of the tribe of Judah, mentioned between Eshtemoah and Goshen ( Joshua 15:50), in the district southwest of Hebron (Keil, Comment. in loc.). Eusebius and Jerome appear to call it Ancea ( Ἀναιά ) , and state that it was wholly inhabited by Jews, lying 9 Roman miles south of Hebron, near another village (with which the name likewise closely agrees) called Ansema ( Ἀνσήμ ), wholly inhabited by Christians ( Onomast. s.v. Ἀνάμ, Anab). Schwarz ( Palest. p. 105) says it is the modern village Ben-Enim, 2 English miles E.N.E. of Hebron, meaning probably Beit- Anim; but this is in a different direction, and is probably the ancient Bethanoth (q.v.). Van de Velde (Memoir, p. 285), although apparently wrong in thinking it may be the Levitical Ain ( Joshua 21:16), is probably correct in agreeing with the identification by Wilson ( Lands of Bible, 1. 354; 2:636) with the village Ghuwein, one hour south of Semoa, on the road from Hebron to Moladah; but unnecessarily supposes the Ain mentioned along with Rimmon (q.v.) in the "south" ( Joshua 15:32), and apportioned to Simeon ( Joshua 19:7), to have been a different one, as he is thus obliged to do. (See Ain).
References
- ↑ Anim from Easton's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anim from Fausset's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anim from Holman Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anim from Hitchcock's Bible Names
- ↑ Anim from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
- ↑ Anim from Morrish Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anim from Smith's Bible Dictionary
- ↑ Anim from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
- ↑ Anim from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature