Aram in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(high).
1. The name by which the Hebrews designated,
generally, the country lying to the northeast of Israel; the
great mass of that high tableland which, rising with sudden
abruptness from the Jordan and the very margin of the Lake
of Gennesaret, stretched at an elevation of no less than
2000 feet above the level of the sea, to the banks of the
Euphrates itself. Throughout the Authorized Version the word
is, with only a very few exceptions, rendered, as in the
Vulgate and LXX., SYRIA. Its earliest occurrence in the book
of Genesis is in the form of Aram-naharaim, i.e. the
"highland of or between the two rivers."
Ge 24:10 Authorized Version "Mesopotamia." In the
later history we meet with a number of small nations or
kingdoms forming parts of the general land of Aram; but as
Damascus increased in importance it gradually absorbed the
smaller powers, 1Ki 20:1 and the name of Aram was at last
applied to it alone. Isa 7:8 also 1Kin 11:24,25; 15:18 etc.
2. Another Aram is named in Ge 22:21 as a son of
Kemuel and descendant of Nahor.
3. An Asherite, one of the sons of Shamer. 1Ch 7:34
4. Son of Esrom or Hezron, and the Greek form of the
Hebrew RAM.
Mt 1:3,4; Lu 3:33
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