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Difference between revisions of "Bdellium"

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== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_34589" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_34589" /> ==
<p> Βedolach (&nbsp;Genesis 2:12), a production of Havilah. &nbsp;Numbers 11:7; "The color of the manna was as the color of Bdellium." A gum exuding from a tree (the Borassus flabelliformis) in Arabia, India, and Babylonia, white and transparent, according to some; but this is hardly precious enough to be ranked with the gold and precious stones of Havilah. Others, a precious stone, crystal or beryl. This hardly suits &nbsp;Genesis 2:12, where "stone" is added to onyx, but not to it. [[Gesenius]] therefore takes it pearls, found abundant at the [[Persian]] gulf. This answers to the parallel comparison of manna to the white hoar frost on the ground (&nbsp;Exodus 16:14). Smith's Dictionary Appendix adheres to its being a gum. </p>
<p> Βedolach (&nbsp;Genesis 2:12), a production of Havilah. &nbsp;Numbers 11:7; "The color of the manna was as the color of Bdellium." [[A]] gum exuding from a tree (the Borassus flabelliformis) in Arabia, India, and Babylonia, white and transparent, according to some; but this is hardly precious enough to be ranked with the gold and precious stones of Havilah. Others, a precious stone, crystal or beryl. This hardly suits &nbsp;Genesis 2:12, where "stone" is added to onyx, but not to it. [[Gesenius]] therefore takes it pearls, found abundant at the [[Persian]] gulf. This answers to the parallel comparison of manna to the white hoar frost on the ground (&nbsp;Exodus 16:14). Smith's Dictionary Appendix adheres to its being a gum. </p>
          
          
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_15639" /> ==
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_15639" /> ==
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== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_58604" /> ==
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_58604" /> ==
<p> BDEL'LIUM, n. Bochard and Parkhurst translate it, pearl. &nbsp;Genesis 2But it is doubtful whether the bdellium of the scriptures is that now used. </p> <p> A gummy resinous juice, produced by a tree in the East Indies, of which we have no satisfactory account. It is brought from the E. Indies and from Arabia, in pieces of different sizes and figures, externally of a dark reddish brown, internally, clear and not unlike to glue. To the taste, it is slightly bitterish and pungent its odor is agreeable. In the mouth, it becomes soft and sticks to the teeth on a red hot iron, it readily catches flame and burns with a crackling noise. It is used as a perfume and a medicine, being a weak deobstruent. </p>
<p> [[Bdel'Lium,]] n. Bochard and Parkhurst translate it, pearl. &nbsp;Genesis 2But it is doubtful whether the bdellium of the scriptures is that now used. </p> <p> [[A]] gummy resinous juice, produced by a tree in the East Indies, of which we have no satisfactory account. It is brought from the [[E.]] Indies and from Arabia, in pieces of different sizes and figures, externally of a dark reddish brown, internally, clear and not unlike to glue. To the taste, it is slightly bitterish and pungent its odor is agreeable. In the mouth, it becomes soft and sticks to the teeth on a red hot iron, it readily catches flame and burns with a crackling noise. It is used as a perfume and a medicine, being a weak deobstruent. </p>
          
          
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_69745" /> ==
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_69745" /> ==
<p> '''Bdellium''' (dĕl'yŭm). A substance said to be found in the land of Havilah. &nbsp;Genesis 2:12. It is also said that the manna, like the hoar-frost, &nbsp;Exodus 16:14, or coriander-seed in size, was like bdellium in color. &nbsp;Numbers 11:7. Some believe this bdellium was a precious stone; some think it of vegetable origin, a kind of gum exuding from a tree. And this, indeed, is the ordinary meaning of that which ancient writers commonly call bdellium. </p>
<p> '''Bdellium''' (''dĕl'yŭm'' ). [[A]] substance said to be found in the land of Havilah. &nbsp;Genesis 2:12. It is also said that the manna, like the hoar-frost, &nbsp;Exodus 16:14, or coriander-seed in size, was like bdellium in color. &nbsp;Numbers 11:7. Some believe this bdellium was a precious stone; some think it of vegetable origin, a kind of gum exuding from a tree. And this, indeed, is the ordinary meaning of that which ancient writers commonly call bdellium. </p>
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_49952" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_49952" /> ==
<p> <strong> BDELLIUM </strong> . The probably correct tr. [Note: translate or translation.] of the Heb. <em> bedôlach </em> , which in &nbsp; [[Genesis]] 2:12 is classed with gold and onyx as a product of the land of Havilah, and in &nbsp; Numbers 11:7 is described as characterizing the ‘appearance’ (RV [Note: Revised Version.] ) of manna. [[Bdellium]] is the fragrant yellow resin of the tree <em> Balsamodendron mukul </em> , growing in N.W. India, Afghanistan, Belucbistan, and at one time perhaps in Arabia. </p> <p> E. W. G. Masterman. </p>
<p> <strong> [[Bdellium]] </strong> . The probably correct tr. [Note: translate or translation.] of the Heb. <em> bedôlach </em> , which in &nbsp; [[Genesis]] 2:12 is classed with gold and onyx as a product of the land of Havilah, and in &nbsp; Numbers 11:7 is described as characterizing the ‘appearance’ [[(Rv]] [Note: Revised Version.] ) of manna. Bdellium is the fragrant yellow resin of the tree <em> Balsamodendron mukul </em> , growing in [[N.W.]] India, Afghanistan, Belucbistan, and at one time perhaps in Arabia. </p> <p> [[E.]] [[W.]] [[G.]] Masterman. </p>
          
          
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_65138" /> ==
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_65138" /> ==
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== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_91775" /> ==
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_91775" /> ==
<p> '''(1):''' (n.) An unidentified substance mentioned in the [[Bible]] (Gen. ii. 12, and Num. xi. 7), variously taken to be a gum, a precious stone, or pearls, or perhaps a kind of amber found in Arabia. </p> <p> '''(2):''' (n.) A gum resin of reddish brown color, brought from India, Persia, and Africa. </p>
<p> '''(1):''' (n.) An unidentified substance mentioned in the Bible (Gen. ii. 12, and Num. xi. 7), variously taken to be a gum, a precious stone, or pearls, or perhaps a kind of amber found in Arabia. </p> <p> '''(2):''' (n.) [[A]] gum resin of reddish brown color, brought from India, Persia, and Africa. </p>
          
          
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_38990" /> ==
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_38990" /> ==
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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_23931" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_23931" /> ==
<p> (בְּדֹלִח, bedo'lach) occurs but twice in the [[Scriptures]] — in &nbsp;Genesis 2:12, as a product of the land of Havilah, and &nbsp;Numbers 11:7, where the manna is likened to it and to hoar — frost on the ground. In the Sept. it is considered as a precious stone, and translated (Gen.) by ἄνθραξ, and (Num.) by κρύσταλλος; while Aquila, Symmachus, Theodotion, and the [[Vulgate]] render it bdellium, a transparent aromatic gum from a tree. Of this opinion also is [[Josephus]] (Ant. in 1, 6), where he describes the manna — ὅμοιον τῇ τῶν ἀρωμάτων βδέλλῃ, i.e. similar to the aromatic bdellium (&nbsp;Numbers 11:7). (See [[Manna]]). Reland supposes it to be a crystal, while Wahl and [[Hartmann]] render it beryl (reading בְּרֹלִח ). The Jewish rabbins, however, followed by a host of their [[Arabian]] translators, and to whom Bochart (Hieroz. 3, 593 sq.) and Gesenius (Thesaur. 1, 181) accede, translate bedolach by pearl, and consider Havilah (q.v.) as the part of Arabia, near Catipha and Bahrein, on the Persian Gulf, where the pearls are found. </p> <p> Those who regard bedolach as some kind of precious stone rest their argument on the fact that it is placed (&nbsp;Genesis 2:12) by the side of "the onyx-stone" (שֹׁה — ם, shoham), which is a gem occurring several times in the Scriptures, and that they are both mentioned as belonging to the productions of the land Havilah. But if this meaning were intended, the reading ought to be, "there is the stone of the onyx and of the bdellium," and not "there is the bdellium and the stone of the onyx," expressly excluding bedolach from the mineral kingdom. Those who translate bedolach by "pearl" refer to the later Jewish and Arabian expounders of the Bible, whose authority, if not strengthened by valid arguments, is. but of little weight. It is, moreover, more than probable that the pearl was as yet unknown in the time of Moses, or he would certainly not have excluded it from the costly contributions to the tabernacle, the priestly dresses, or even the Urim and Thummim, while its fellow shoham, though of less value, was variously used among the sacred ornaments (&nbsp;Exodus 25:7; &nbsp;Exodus 35:9; &nbsp;Exodus 35:27; &nbsp;Exodus 28:20; &nbsp;Exodus 39:1,). Nor do we find any mention of pearl in the times of David and Solomon. It is true that Luther translates פְּנִינַים, peninim' (&nbsp;Proverbs 3:15; &nbsp;Proverbs 8:11; &nbsp;Proverbs 10:25; &nbsp;Proverbs 31:10), by pearls, but this is not borne out by &nbsp;Lamentations 4:7, where it is indicated as having a red color. The only passage in the Old Test. where the pearl really occurs under its true Arabic name is in &nbsp;Esther 1:6 (דִּר, dar); and in the N.T. it is very frequently mentioned under the Greek name μαργαρίτης. (See [[Pearl]]). It is therefore most probable that the [[Hebrew]] bedolach is the aromatic gum bdellium, which issues from a tree growing in Arabia, Media, and the Indies. Dioscorides (1, 80) informs us that it was called μάδελκον or βολχόν, and Pliny (12, 19), that it bore the names of brochon, malacham, and maldacon. The frequent interchange of letters brings the form very near to that of the Hebrew word; nor is the similarity of name in the Hebrew and Greek, in the case of natural productions, less conclusive of the nature of the article, since the Greeks probably retained the ancient Oriental names of productions coming from the East. Pliny's description of the tree from which the bdellium is taken makes Kaempfer's assertion (Amaen. Exot. p. 668) highly probable, that it is the sort of palm-tree (Borassus flabelliformis, Linn. 101, 6, 3, Trigynia) so frequently met with en the Persian coast and in Arabia Felix. </p> <p> The term bdellium, however, is applied to two gummy-resinous substances. One of them is the Indian bdellium, or false myrrh (perhaps the bdellium of the Scriptures), which is obtained from Amyris (balsamodendron?) Commiphora. Dr. Roxburgh (Flor. Ind. 2, 245) says that the trunk of the tree is covered with a light-colored pellicle, as in the common birch, which peels off from time to time, exposing to view a smooth green coat, which, in succession, supplies other similar exfoliations. This tree diffuses a grateful fragrance, like that of the finest myrrh, to a considerable distance around. Dr. Royle (Illust. p. 176) was informed that this species yielded bdellium; and, in confirmation of this statement, we may add that many of the specimens of this bdellium in the British Museum have a yellow pellicle adhering to them, precisely like that of the common birch, and that some of the pieces are perforated by spiny branches, another character serving to recognize the origin of the bdellium. Indian bdellium has considerable resemblance to myrrh. Many of the pieces have hairs adhering to them. The other kind of bdellium is called African bdellium, and is obtained from Heudolotia [[Africana]] (Richard and Gaillemin, Fl. de Senegambie). It is a natural production of Senegal, and is called by the natives, who make tooth-picks of its spines, niottout. It consists of rounded or oval tears, from one to two inches in diameter, of a dull and waxy fracture, which, in the course of time, become opaque, and are covered externally by a white or yellowish dust. It has a feeble but peculiar odor, and a bitter taste. Pelletier (Ann. de Chim. 80, 39) found it to consist of resin, 59.0; soluble gum, 9.2; bassorin, 30.6; volatile oil and loss, 1.2. Resin of bdellium (African bdellium?) consists, according to Johnstone, of carbon, 40; hydrogen, 31; oxygen, 5. See [[Penny]] Cyclopoedia, s.v. </p>
<p> (בְּדֹלִח, ''bedo'' '''lach'' ) occurs but twice in the [[Scriptures]] — in &nbsp;Genesis 2:12, as a product of the land of Havilah, and &nbsp;Numbers 11:7, where the manna is likened to it and to hoar — frost on the ground. In the Sept. it is considered as a precious stone, and translated (Gen.) by ἄνθραξ, and (Num.) by κρύσταλλος; while Aquila, Symmachus, Theodotion, and the [[Vulgate]] render it ''bdellium,'' a transparent aromatic gum from a tree. Of this opinion also is [[Josephus]] (''Ant.'' in 1, 6), where he describes the ''manna — ὅμοιον τῇ τῶν ἀρωμάτων βδέλλῃ,'' i.e. similar to the aromatic ''bdellium'' (&nbsp;Numbers 11:7). (See [[Manna]]). Reland supposes it to be ''a crystal,'' while Wahl and [[Hartmann]] render it beryl (reading בְּרֹלִח ). The Jewish rabbins, however, followed by a host of their [[Arabian]] translators, and to whom Bochart (''Hieroz.'' 3, 593 sq.) and Gesenius (''Thesaur.'' 1, 181) accede, translate bedolach by pearl, and consider Havilah (q.v.) as the part of Arabia, near Catipha and Bahrein, on the Persian Gulf, where the pearls are found. </p> <p> Those who regard bedolach as some kind of precious stone rest their argument on the fact that it is placed (&nbsp;Genesis 2:12) by the side of "the ''onyx-stone'' " (שֹׁה — ם, ''shoham'' )'','' which is a gem occurring several times in the Scriptures, and that they are both mentioned as belonging to the productions of the land Havilah. But if this meaning were intended, the reading ought to be, "there is the stone of the onyx and of the bdellium," and not "there is the bdellium and the stone of the onyx," expressly excluding ''bedolach'' from the mineral kingdom. Those who translate bedolach by "pearl" refer to the later Jewish and Arabian expounders of the Bible, whose authority, if not strengthened by valid arguments, is. but of little weight. It is, moreover, more than probable that the pearl was as yet unknown in the time of Moses, or he would certainly not have excluded it from the costly contributions to the tabernacle, the priestly dresses, or even the [[Urim]] and Thummim, while its fellow shoham, though of less value, was variously used among the sacred ornaments (&nbsp;Exodus 25:7; &nbsp;Exodus 35:9; &nbsp;Exodus 35:27; &nbsp;Exodus 28:20; &nbsp;Exodus 39:1,). Nor do we find any mention of pearl in the times of David and Solomon. It is true that Luther translates פְּנִינַים, ''peninim'' ' (&nbsp;Proverbs 3:15; &nbsp;Proverbs 8:11; &nbsp;Proverbs 10:25; &nbsp;Proverbs 31:10), ''by pearls,'' but this is not borne out by &nbsp;Lamentations 4:7, where it is indicated as having a ''red'' color. The only passage in the Old Test. where the pearl really occurs under its true Arabic name is in &nbsp;Esther 1:6 (דִּר, ''dar'' )'';'' and in the [[N.T.]] it is very frequently mentioned under the Greek name μαργαρίτης. (See [[Pearl]]). It is therefore most probable that the [[Hebrew]] ''bedolach'' is the aromatic gum ''bdellium,'' which issues from a tree growing in Arabia, Media, and the Indies. Dioscorides (1, 80) informs us that it was called μάδελκον or βολχόν, and Pliny (12, 19), that it bore the names of ''brochon, malacham,'' and ''maldacon.'' The frequent interchange of letters brings the form very near to that of the Hebrew word; nor is the similarity of name in the Hebrew and Greek, in the case of natural productions, less conclusive of the nature of the article, since the [[Greeks]] probably retained the ancient Oriental names of productions coming from the East. Pliny's description of the tree from which the bdellium is taken makes Kaempfer's assertion (Amaen. Exot. p. 668) highly probable, that it is the sort of palm-tree (Borassus flabelliformis, Linn. 101, 6, 3, Trigynia) so frequently met with en the Persian coast and in Arabia Felix. </p> <p> The term bdellium, however, is applied to two gummy-resinous substances. One of them is the Indian bdellium, or false myrrh (perhaps the bdellium of the Scriptures), which is obtained from Amyris (balsamodendron?) Commiphora. Dr. Roxburgh (Flor. Ind. 2, 245) says that the trunk of the tree is covered with a light-colored pellicle, as in the common birch, which peels off from time to time, exposing to view a smooth green coat, which, in succession, supplies other similar exfoliations. This tree diffuses a grateful fragrance, like that of the finest myrrh, to a considerable distance around. Dr. Royle (Illust. p. 176) was informed that this species yielded bdellium; and, in confirmation of this statement, we may add that many of the specimens of this bdellium in the British Museum have a yellow pellicle adhering to them, precisely like that of the common birch, and that some of the pieces are perforated by spiny branches, another character serving to recognize the origin of the bdellium. Indian bdellium has considerable resemblance to myrrh. Many of the pieces have hairs adhering to them. The other kind of bdellium is called African bdellium, and is obtained from Heudolotia [[Africana]] (Richard and Gaillemin, Fl. de Senegambie). It is a natural production of Senegal, and is called by the natives, who make tooth-picks of its spines, niottout. It consists of rounded or oval tears, from one to two inches in diameter, of a dull and waxy fracture, which, in the course of time, become opaque, and are covered externally by a white or yellowish dust. It has a feeble but peculiar odor, and a bitter taste. Pelletier (Ann. de Chim. 80, 39) found it to consist of resin, 59.0; soluble gum, 9.2; bassorin, 30.6; volatile oil and loss, 1.2. [[Resin]] of bdellium (African bdellium?) consists, according to Johnstone, of carbon, 40; hydrogen, 31; oxygen, 5. See [[Penny]] Cyclopoedia, s.v. </p>
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15243" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_15243" /> ==