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Read the Bible
Louis Segond
Nombres 34:8
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- BridgewayEncyclopedias:
- CondensedParallel Translations
Puis de la montagne de Hor, vous marquerez pour vos limites l'entrée de Hamath, et la frontičre aboutira ŕ Tsedad.
depuis la montagne de Hor vous tracerez jusqu'ŕ l'entrée de Hamath, et la frontičre aboutira vers Tsedad;
Et de la montagne de Hor vous marquerez pour vos limites l'entrée de Hamath; et cette frontičre se rendra vers Tsédad.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
the entrance: Numbers 13:21, Joshua 13:5, Joshua 13:6, 2 Samuel 8:9, 2 Kings 14:25, Jeremiah 39:5, Ezekiel 47:15-20
Reciprocal: Genesis 10:18 - Hamathite Joshua 19:35 - Hammath Judges 3:3 - in mount 1 Kings 8:65 - from the entering 2 Kings 19:13 - the king 1 Chronicles 1:16 - Hamathite 1 Chronicles 13:5 - Hemath 2 Chronicles 8:3 - Hamathzobah Isaiah 36:19 - Hamath Jeremiah 52:27 - Riblah Ezekiel 11:10 - in Ezekiel 47:16 - Hamath Amos 6:14 - from
Gill's Notes on the Bible
From Mount Hor ye shall point out your border unto the entrance of Hamath,.... Antiochia, as Jarchi; or rather Epiphania, as Jerom r; the former being described by Hemath the great, Amos 6:2, this entrance was a narrow pass leading from the land of Canaan to Syria, through the valley which lies between Lebanon and Antilibanus:
and the goings forth of the border shall be to Zedad; the same boundary as here is given in Ezekiel 47:15.
r Comment. in Ezek. 47. 16.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
The northern border. On the “Mount Hor,” compare Numbers 20:22 note. Here the name denotes the whole western crest of Mount Lebanon, 80 miles in length, commencing east of Zidon, and terminating with the point immediately above the entrance of Hamath (compare Numbers 13:21). The extreme point in the northern border of the land was the city of Zedad (Sadad), about 30 miles east of the entrance of Hamath. Hence, the border turned back southwestward to Ziphron (Zifran), about 40 miles northeast of Damascus. Hazar-enan may be conjecturally identified with Ayun ed-Dara, a fountain situate in the very heart of the great central chain of Antilibanus.