(Hebrew Almon'-Diblatha-yim, found only with ה - local and in pause, דִּבְלָת יְמָה עִלְמוֹן, [to the] covering of the two fig-cakes; Sept. Γελμὼν Δεβλαθαίμ, Vulg. Helmondeblathaim), the fifty-first station of the Israelites, (See EXODE) between Dibongad and the well (Beer) in the wilderness east of the Dead Sea (Numbers 33:46-47); probably the same elsewhere called BETH-DIBLATHAIM (See BETH-DIBLATHAIM) (Jeremiah 48:22) and DIBLATH (See DIBLATH) (Ezekiel 6:14). (See DIBLATHAIM). It appears to have lain in a fertile spot not far north of Dibon-gad, perhaps on the edge of the eminence overlooking the Wady Waleh. (See DIBON-GAD).