Zabadaeans

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible [1]

ZABADÆANS . The name of an Arabian tribe defeated by Jonathan Maccabæus, b.c. 144. According to the account in 1Ma 12:30-32 , its home was to the N.W. of Damascus. Perhaps Zebedâni , on the Anti-Lebanon, about 20 miles on the way from Damascus to Baalbek, represents the ancient name.

J. F. McCurdy.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [2]

zab - a - dē´anz ( Ζαβαδαῖοι , Zabadaı́oi  ; the King James Version Zabadeans ; Oesterley, in Charles, Apocrypha, I, 112, prefers, on what seems insufficient evidence, to read "Gabadeans"; Josephus ( Ant. , Xiii , v, 10) by an obvious error has "Nabateans"): According to  1 Maccabees 12:31 , an Arabian tribe, defeated and spoiled by Jonathan after his victory in Hamath and before he came to Damascus. There is an ez - Zebedânı̂ about 25 miles Northwest of Damascus (now a station on the railway to Beirut), on the eastern slope of the Anti-Lebanon range. This town may very well have preserved the name of the Zabadaeans, and its situation accords nicely with Jonathan's movements in   1 Maccabees 12 .

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