Arumah

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Fausset's Bible Dictionary [1]

Near Shechem, where Abimelech resided (Judges 9:41).

Holman Bible Dictionary [2]

Judges 9:41

Hitchcock's Bible Names [3]

Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [4]

ARUMAH . The place of refuge of Abimelech ( Judges 9:41 ), perhaps el-‘Ormeh , 6 miles S.E. of Nâblus (Shechem).

E. W. G. Masterman.

Morrish Bible Dictionary [5]

City or district apparently near Shechem, the abode of Abimelech. Judges 9:41 . Identified with el-Ormeh, 35 19' E 32 9' N .

Smith's Bible Dictionary [6]

Aru'mah. (height). A place, apparently, in the neighborhood of Shechem, at which Abimelech resided. Judges 9:41.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [7]

a -roo´ma ( ארומה , 'ărūmah , "lofty"): The town in which Abimelech, the son of Jerubbaal (Gideon), dwelt when driven from Shechem (Judges 9:41 ). The ruins El-Ormeh, 6 miles Southeast of Shechem, may be on the site, though its position is not known with certainty.

Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature [8]

Aru´mah, otherwise Rumah, a city near Shechem, where Abimelech encamped (Judges 9:41).

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [9]

(Heb. Arumah', אֲרוּמָה, prob. for Rumah, with א prosthetic; Sept. Ἀρημά ), a city apparently near Shechem, in which Abimelech the son of Gideon resided (Judges 9:41). It has been conjectured that the word in Judges 9:31, בְּתָרְמָה, rendered "privily," and in the margin " at Tormah," may signify " at Arumah" by changing the ת to an א . It seems to be confounded with Rumah (2 Kings 23:36) by Euseb. and Jerome, who state (Onomast. s.v. Ruma) that it (Ἀρίμ, 'Arima) was then called Remphis or Arimathceal The suggestion of Van de Velde (Memoir, p. 288) appears to be correct that it is represented by the modern ruin ElOrmah, on the brow of a mountain S.E. of Shechem.

Arumah.

The site proposed for this place by Van de Velde (Memoir, p. 288), and adopted by Tristram (Bible Places, p.'192), is laid down as El-Ormeh on the Ordnance Map, six and three fourth miles south-east of Nablfs, as a square ruin on the western edge of a tongue or spur projecting southwards from the general range of hills (2700 feet above the sea), with two or three old cisterns just to the north, and some other remains of a circular form a little to the east. A spring called Ain Aulam or Aulun lies half a 'mile to the west, just across the valley.

References