Moreh in Wikipedia
Moreh is a name of a location, commonly used in the Genesis.
Translators who consider the obscure elon moreh of Genesis
12:6 to be the name of a locality, render it as "the plains
of Moreh". Translators who consider the term to be a sacred
tree or grove, often render it "terebinth," a tree notable
for its size and age in dry landscapes of the region. The
noble terebinth is a member of the pistachio and sumac
family. Thus for them, at Shechem, grew the terebinths,
elone moreh: "Abraham passed through the land as far as the
site of Shechem, at the Terebinths of Moreh. The Caananites
were then in the land" (Genesis 12:6). This tree or grove,
with a name that must mean "teacher," "oracle" was a
landmark in the area called the "plains of Moreh"
(Deuteronomy 11:30) or the "hill of Moreh" (Judges 7:1).
Genesis 35:4: And they gave unto Jacob all the strange gods
which [were] in their hand, and [all their] earrings which
[were] in their ears; and Jacob hid them under the oak which
[was] by Shechem. A neutral reading discovers that the tree,
oak or not, grew above buried idols and dedicated treasure,
the Hebrews remembered, and they associated the burial of
these things with the patriarchal age.
The site of Moreh, a hill by which Gideon camped before he
attacked the Midianites, is sometimes identified with modern
Nebi Dahi, Israel, south of Mount Tabor but this has not
been confirmed on the ground.
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