Tigris River in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
(See HIDDEKEL.) Genesis 2:14, "running eastward to Assyria."
Daniel 10:4, "the great river." Rising in the Armenian
mountains, not far from the sources of Euphrates, it flows
N.E. of the latter for 1,100 miles, when at last they join and
flow as one river into the Persian gulf. Its greatest breadth
is more than 200 yards. For the last two hundred, miles before
its confluence with the Euphrates the country was intersected
with artificial watercourses and adapted river beds, such as
the Shat-el-Hie, or river of Hie; and in this district are the
ruins of old towns; some scarcely known, as Zirgul, "the city
of the brilliant light"; others better known, as Ur (Mugheir).
(See UR.) It ran through Armenia and Assyria, and then
separated Babylonia from Susiana. Subsequently it was the
boundary between the Roman and Parthian empires.
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