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ꜣpjḏꜣꜣ
[1]
[2]
[3] in hieroglyphs | |||||||
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Era:
New Kingdom (1550–1069 BC) | |||||||
Ebez ( Hebrew: אֶבֶץ meaning "tin", or "white") [4] also rendered Abez, was a town in the allotment of the tribe of Issachar, at the north of the Jezreel Valley, or plain of Esdraelon. [5] F. R. and C. R. Conder (1879), believed that it was probably the ruins of el-Beida, but William Robertson Smith (1899) expressed doubt about this identification. [6] [7] According to the 1915 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (1915), the location is not known. [8] It is mentioned only in Joshua 19:20, where various manuscripts of the Septuagint render it as Rebes ( Ancient Greek: Ῥεβὲς), Aeme, or Aemis. [9] It is mentioned on the façade of the Mortuary Temple of Ramesses III at Medinet Habu as Apijaa. [1] [2] [3]
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ꜣpjḏꜣꜣ
[1]
[2]
[3] in hieroglyphs | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Era:
New Kingdom (1550–1069 BC) | |||||||
Ebez ( Hebrew: אֶבֶץ meaning "tin", or "white") [4] also rendered Abez, was a town in the allotment of the tribe of Issachar, at the north of the Jezreel Valley, or plain of Esdraelon. [5] F. R. and C. R. Conder (1879), believed that it was probably the ruins of el-Beida, but William Robertson Smith (1899) expressed doubt about this identification. [6] [7] According to the 1915 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (1915), the location is not known. [8] It is mentioned only in Joshua 19:20, where various manuscripts of the Septuagint render it as Rebes ( Ancient Greek: Ῥεβὲς), Aeme, or Aemis. [9] It is mentioned on the façade of the Mortuary Temple of Ramesses III at Medinet Habu as Apijaa. [1] [2] [3]