Jorah

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

Smith's Bible Dictionary [1]

Jo'rah. (The Early Rain). The ancestor of a family of 112, who returned from Babylon with Ezra.  Ezra 2:18. In  Nehemiah 7:24, he appears under the name Hariph , or more correctly, the same family are represented, as the Bene-Hariph, (that is, sons of Hariph).

Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [2]

Jorah The name of a family which returned with Zerubbabel (  Ezra 2:18 ); called in   Nehemiah 7:24 Hariph , which is probably the true form. 1Es 5:16 reads Arsiphurith .

Holman Bible Dictionary [3]

 Ezra 2:18 Nehemiah 7:24 Nehemiah 10:19Hariph

Morrish Bible Dictionary [4]

Ancestor of some who returned from exile,  Ezra 2:18 . Apparently called HARIPH in  Nehemiah 7:24 .

Fausset's Bible Dictionary [5]

 Ezra 2:18. In  Nehemiah 7:24 Hariph.

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [6]

(Heb. Yorah', יוֹרָה , prob. for יוֹרֶה , sprinkling, or autumnal Rain; Sept. Ι᾿Ωρά v.r. Οὐρά Vulg. Jora ) , a man whose descendants (or a place whose former inhabitants) to the number of 112 returned from the Babylonian captivity ( Ezra 2:18); called HARIPH in the parallel passage ( Nehemiah 7:24). "In Ezra two of De Rossi's MSS., and originally one of Kennicott's, had יודה , i.e. Jodah, which is the reading of the Syriac and Arabic versions. One of Kennicott's MSS. had the original reading in Ezra altered to, יור , i.e. Joram; and two in Nehemiah read, חרי , i.e. Harim, which corresponds with Ἀρείμ of the Alexandrian MS., and Churom of the Syriac. In any case, the change or confusion of letters which might have caused the variation of the name is so slight that it is difficult to pronounce. which is the true form, the corruption of Jorah into Hariph being as easily conceivable as the reverse. Burrington (Geneal. 2, 75) decides in favor of the latter, but from a comparison of both passages with  Ezra 10:31 we should be inclined to regard Harim ( חרם ) as the true reading in all cases. But, on any supposition, it is difficult to account for the form Azephurith. or, more properly, Ἀρσιφομρίθ , in  1 Esdras 5:16, which Burrington considers as having originated in a corruption of the two readings in Ezra and Nehemiah, the second syllable arising from an error of the transcriber in mistaking the uncial E for Σ "

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [7]

jō´ra ( יורה , yōrāh meaning uncertain, perhaps "harvest-born"): A family which returned with Zerubbabel (  Ezra 2:18 ) = "Chariph" of  Nehemiah 7:24 = "Arsiphurith" (the King James Version "Arzephurith") of 1 Esdras 5:16.

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