Spices in Smiths Bible Dictionary
1. Heb. basam, besem or bosem. In So 5:1 "I have gathered my
myrrh with my spice," the word points apparently to some
definite substance. In the other places, with the exception
perhaps of So 1:13; 6:2 the words refer more generally to
sweet aromatic odors, the principal of which was that of the
balsam or balm of Gilead; the tree which yields this
substance is now generally admitted to be the Balsam-
odendron opobalsamum. The balm of Gilead tree grows in some
parts of Arabia and Africa, and is seldom more than fifteen
feet high, with straggling branches and scanty foliage. The
balsam is chiefly obtained from incisions in the bark, but
is procured also from the green and ripe berries.
2. Necoth. Ge 37:25; 43:11 The most probable
explanation is that which refers the word to the Arabic
naku'at i.e. "the gum obtained from the tragacanth"
(Astragalus).
3. Sammim, a general term to denote those aromatic
substances which were used in the preparation of the
anointing oil, the incense offerings, etc. The spices
mentioned as being used by Nicodemus for the preparation of
our Lord's body, Joh 19:39,40 are "myrrh and aloes," by
which latter word must be understood not the aloes of
medicine, but the highly-scented wood of the Aquilaria
agallochum.
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