Moreh in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(teacher).
1. The plain or plains (or, as it should rather be
rendered, the oak or oaks) of Moreh. The oak of Moreh was the
first recorded halting-place of Abram after his entrance into
the land of Canaan. Ge 12:6 It was at the "place of Shechem,"
ch. Ge 12:6 close to the mountains of Ebal and Gerizim. De
11:30
2. The hill of Moreh, at the foot of which the
Midianites and Amalekites were encamped before Gideon's attack
upon them. Jud 7:1 It lay in the valley of Jezreel, rather on
the north side of the valley, and north also of the eminence
on which Gideon's little band of heroes was clustered. These
conditions are most accurately fulfilled if we assume Jebel
ed-Duhy, the "Little Hermon" of the modern travellers, 1815
feet above the Mediterranean, to be Moreh, the Ain-Jalood to
be the spring of Harod, and Gideon's position to have been on
the northeast slope of Jebel Fukua (Mount Gilboa), between the
village of Nuris and the last-mentioned spring.
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