Ataroth-Addar

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Holman Bible Dictionary [1]

 Joshua 16:5 Joshua 18:13

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [2]

This place, if the same as Ataroth simply in the same enumeration of- cities on the boundary between Benjamin and Ephraim, cannot have been situated between Janohah and Naarath, and at the same time between Archi and Japhleti; therefore  Joshua 16:7 seems to mean that the line went from Janohah in opposite directions to Ataroth and Naarath respectively. (See Tribe). Lieut. Conder appears to regard this as a different place from that called simply Ataroth, which he locates At.Tell El-Truny, without defiling its position (Tent Work, ii, 334); while he identifies (Ibid. p. 105) Ataroth-Addar with Ed-Darieh, a small ruin laid down on the Ordnance Map as Khurbet Ddiah, one mile and an eighth south of west from Beit-Ur el-Tahta. Dr. Tristram makes this Ataroth to be the same with Ataroth- Addar, but fluctuates as to its position, in one place (Bible Places, p. 116) identifying it with "the modern Atara or Dariah, two miles and a half north of Ramah"' (two widely different places; he evidently means Attara), while in another (Ibid. p. 176) he calls it " the village of Tireh," which the Ordnance Map lays down as Et-Tireh, one mile and an eighth south-east of Beit-Ur el-Tohka. The true modern site is probably 'A Ttara, which the Ordnance Map lays down on the thoroughfare half-way (a mile. and three fourths) between Bireh (Beeroth) and Er-Ram (Ramah), with'ruins and a pool and tombs adjacent.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [3]

at´a - roth - ad´ar ( עטרות אדּר , ‛aṭrōth 'addar , "crowns of Addar"). See Ataroth (2).

References