Arabah in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(burnt up). Although this word appears in the Authorized
Version in its original shape only in Jos 18:18 yet in the
Hebrew text it is of frequent occurrence. It indicates more
particularly the deep-sunken valley or trench which forms the
most striking among the many striking natural features of
Israel, and which extends with great uniformity of
formation from the slopes of Hermon to the Elanitic Gulf (Gulf
of Akabah) of the Red Sea; the most remarkable depression
known to exist on the surface of the globe. Through the
northern portion of this extraordinary fissure the Jordan
rushes through the lakes of Huleh and Gennesaret down its
tortuous course to the deep chasm of the Dead Sea. This
portion, about 150 miles in length, is known amongst the Arabs
by the name of el-Ghor. The southern boundary of the (Ghor is
the wall of cliffs which crosses the valley about 10 miles
south of the Dead Sea. From their summits, southward to the
Gulf of Akabah, the valley changes its name, or, it would be
more accurate to say, retains old name of Wady el-Arabah.
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