Ramah in Easton's Bible Dictionary
(Matt. 2:18), the Greek form of Ramah. (1.) A city first
mentioned in Josh. 18:25, near Gibeah of Benjamin.
It was
fortified by Baasha, king of Israel (1 Kings 15:17-
22; 2 Chr.
16:1-6). Asa, king of Judah, employed Benhadad the
Syrian king
to drive Baasha from this city (1 Kings 15:18, 20).
Isaiah
(10:29) refers to it, and also Jeremiah, who was
once a prisoner
there among the other captives of Jerusalem when it
was taken by
Nebuchadnezzar (Jer. 39:8-12; 40:1). Rachel, whose
tomb lies
close to Bethlehem, is represented as weeping in
Ramah (Jer.
31:15) for her slaughtered children. This prophecy
is
illustrated and fulfilled in the re-awakening of
Rachel's grief
at the slaughter of the infants in Bethlehem (Matt.
2:18). It is
identified with the modern village of er-Ram,
between Gibeon and
Beeroth, about 5 miles due north of Jerusalem. (See
SAMUEL
(2.) A town identified with Rameh, on the border of
Asher,
about 13 miles south-east of Tyre, "on a solitary
hill in the
midst of a basin of green fields" (Josh. 19:29).
(3.) One of the "fenced cities" of Naphtali (Josh.
19:36), on
a mountain slope, about seven and a half miles west-
south-west
of Safed, and 15 miles west of the north end of the
Sea of
Galilee, the present large and well-built village of
Rameh.
(4.) The same as Ramathaim-zophim (q.v.), a town of
Mount
Ephraim (1 Sam. 1:1, 19).
(5.) The same as Ramoth-gilead (q.v.), 2 Kings 8:29;
2 Chr.
22:6.
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