Haran in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
ha'-ran (charan; Charhran): The city where Terah settled on
his departure from Ur (Gen 11:31 f); whence Abram set out on
his pilgrimage of faith to Canaan (Gen 12:1 ff). It was
probably "the city of Nahor" to which Abraham's servant came
to find a wife for Isaac (Gen 24:10 ff). Hither came Jacob
when he fled from Esau's anger (Gen 27:43). Here he met his
bride (Gen 29:4), and in the neighboring pastures he tended
the flocks of Laban. It is one of the cities named by
Rabshakeh as destroyed by the king of Assyria (2 Ki 19:12;
Isa 37:12). Ezekiel speaks of the merchants of Haran as
trading with Tyre (27:23).
The name appears in Assyro-Babalonian as Charran, which
means "road"; possibly because here the trade route from
Damascus joined that from Nineveh to Carchemish. It is
mentioned in the prism inscription of Tiglath-pileser I. It
was a seat of the worship of Sin, the moon-god, from very
ancient times. A temple was built by Shalmaneser II. Haran
seems to have shared in the rebellion of Assur (763 BC, the
year of the solar eclipse, June 15). The privileges then
lost were restored by Sargon II. The temple, which had been
destroyed, was rebuilt by Ashurbanipal, who was here crowned
with the crown of Sin. Haran and the temple suffered much
damage in the invasion of the Umman-Manda (the Medes).
Nabuna`id restored temple and city, adorning them on a
lavish scale. Near Haran the Parthians defeated and slew
Crassus (53 BC), and here Caracalla was assassinated (217
AD). In the 4th century it was the seat of a bishopric; but
the cult of the moon persisted far into the Christian
centuries. The chief temple was the scene of heathen worship
until the 11th century, and was destroyed by the Mongols in
the 13th.
The ancient city is represented by the modern Charran to the
Southeast of Edessa, on the river Belias, an affluent of the
Euphrates. The ruins lie on both sides of the stream, and
include those of a very ancient castle, built of great
basaltic blocks, with square columns, 8 ft. thick, which
support an arched roof some 30 ft. in height. Remains of the
old cathedral are also conspicuous. No inscriptions have yet
been found here, but a fragment of an Assyrian lion has been
uncovered. A well nearby is identified as that where Eliezer
met Rebekah.
In Acts 7:2,4, the King James Version gives the name as
Charran.
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