What is Christianity Wiki

Jump to: navigation, search

Ezra 8:15

Back to Treasury of Scripture Knowledge


Back to Ezra'


the river that runneth.

Ahava is supposed to be the river Adiava, which, with the Diava, is said by Ammianus to have given name to Adiabene, a province of Assyria, through which they flowed into the Tigris.

These rivers were also called respectively, Anzabas and Zabas, the Caprus and Lycus of Ptolemy; the former of which he places, at its source, in long.

79 degrees, lat.
39�degrees, and at its junction with the Tigris, in long.
79�degrees, lat.
36 degrees 6'; and the latter, at its source, in long 78 degrees, lat.
39 degrees; and where it falls into the Tigris, in long.
79 degrees, lat.
36�degrees.

They are now called the Great and Little Zab, or the Zabein, i.e., the two Zabs, which, says Ibn Haukal, "are considerable streams, each about half as large as the Dejleh (or Tigris).

They rise among the mountains of Azerbaijan: of these, the larger is that which runs towards Haditheh.

These streams form part of the Tigris, and water the district of Semerah."

Ps 137:1; Ezek 1:1; Ezek 3:15; Acts 16:13

Ahava.

Ezra 8:21; Ezra 8:31

abode. Heb. pitched. and found.

Ezra 8:2; Ezra 7:7; Ezra 7:24