Madmenah

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

Smith's Bible Dictionary [1]

Madme'nah. (Dunghill). One of the Benjamite villages, north of Jerusalem, the inhabitants of which were frightened away by the approach of Sennacherib along the northern road.  Isaiah 10:31.

Fausset's Bible Dictionary [2]

Not the city in Simeon, or southern Judah, (See Madmannah , but a Benjamite village N. of Jerusalem, whose people fled ("is removed,"  Isaiah 10:31, rather "flees") before Sennacherib's approach from the N.

Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [3]

Madmenah A place apparently north of Jerusalem, named only in the ideal description of the Assyrian invasion,   Isaiah 10:31 . The name has not been recovered.

Morrish Bible Dictionary [4]

A city, apparently, by the other places mentioned, near Jerusalem.  Isaiah 10:31 . Not identified.

Easton's Bible Dictionary [5]

 Isaiah 10:31 Isaiah 25:10

American Tract Society Bible Dictionary [6]

A town not far from Jerusalem, site not known,  Isaiah 10:31 .

Holman Bible Dictionary [7]

 Isaiah 10:31

Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature [8]

(Heb. Madmenah', מִדַמֵנָה , Dunghill; Sept. Μαδεβηνά , Vulg. Medemena) , a town named in  Isaiah 10:31, where it is placed on the route of the Assyrian invaders, in the northern vicinity of Jerusalem, between Nob and Gibeah. It has been confounded by Eusebius and Jerome with MADMANNAH, which is much too far southward to suit the context. "Gesenius ( Jesaias, p. 414) points out that the verb in the sentence is active Madmenah flies,' not, as in the A. Vers., is removed' (so also Michaelis, Bibelfii- Ungelehrten ) . Madmenah is not impossibly alluded to by Isaiah (25:10) in his denunciation of Moab, where the word rendered in the Auth. Vers. dunghill' is identical with that name. The original text (or Kethib ) , by a variation in the preposition ( במי for במו ), reads the waters of Madmenah.' If this is so, the reference may be either to the Madmenah of Benjamin one of the towns in a district abounding with corn and threshing-floors or, more appropriately still, to Madmen the Moabitish town. Gesenius (Jesaias, p. 786) appears to have overlooked this, which might have induced him to regard with more favor a suggestion that seems to have been first made by Joseph Kimchi."

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [9]

mad - mē´na ( מדמנה , madhmēnāh  ; Μαδεβηνᾶ , Madebēná ): A place mentioned only in Isaiah's description of the Assyrian advance upon Jerusalem (  Isaiah 10:31 ). It is not identified.

Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature [10]

Madme´nah, a town only named in , where it is manifestly placed between Nob and Gibeah. It is generally confounded with the preceding, which is much too far southward to suit the context.

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