Syria in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Septuagint Greek for Hebrew 'Aram, fifth of Shem's sons.
Aram means the high land N.E. of the Holy Land, extending
from the Jordan and the sea of Galilee to the Euphrates; the
term means "high". In Genesis Aram-Naharaim, i.e. "Aram
between the two rivers", is Mesopotamia, part of which is
Padan Aram; and Laban who lived there is called the Aramaean
or Syrian. Syria is by some derived from Assyria, by others
from Tyre, as if Tsyria; by Ritter from Shur, the wilderness
into which Israel passed out of Egypt (Genesis 25:18; Exodus
15:22; 1 Samuel 27:8), from whence the name was extended
over all Syria. The Hebrew Aram begins on the northern
border of Israel, and thence goes northward to Mount
Taurus, westward to the Mediterranean, eastward to the
Khabour river. Divided into Aram or Syria of Damascus, Aram
or Syria of Zobah (the tract between Euphrates and
Coelosyria), Aram or Syria Naharaim ('of the two rivers"),
i.e. Padan Aram or Mesopotamia, the N.W. part of the land
between the Tigris and Euphrates.
On the W. two mountain chains run parallel to one
another and to the coast from the latitude of Tyre to that
of Antioch, namely, Lebanon and Antilebanon; Lebanon the
western chain at its southern end becomes Bargylus. Mount
Amanus, an offshoot of Taurus, meets the two long chains at
their northern extremity, and separates Syria from Cilicia.
The valley between Lebanon and Antilebanon is the most
fertile in Syria, extending 230 miles, and in width from 8
to 20 miles. The southern portion is Coelosyria and Hamath.
The Litany in this valley (el Bukaa) flows to the S.W.; the
Orontes (nahr el Asi, i.e. "the rebel stream") flows to the
N. and N.E. for 200 miles; the Barada of Damascus is another
river of Syria. The Syrian desert is E. of the inner chain
of mountains, and S. of Aleppo; it contains the oasis of
Palmyra, and toward its western side the productive plain of
Damascus.
The chief towns were Antioch, Damascus, Tadmor or
Palmyra, Laodicea, Hamath (Epiphaneia), Hierapolis,
Heliopolis or Baalbek in Coelosyria, Chalybon or Aleppo,
Apamea, and Emesa. Hamites, as the Hittites (the Khatti in
the monuments), first occupied Syria. Then a Shemite element
entered from the S.E., e.g. Abraham, Chedorlaomer, Amraphel.
In early times Syria was divided among many petty "kings,"
as Damascus, Rehob, Maacah, Zobah, Geshur, etc. 1 Kings
10:29, "kings of Syria"; 2 Kings 7:6, "kings of the
Hittites." Joshua fought with the chiefs of the region of
Lebanon and Hermon (Joshua 11:2-18). David conquered...
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