Gaba
Gaba
a less correct mode of Anglicizing (Jos 18:24; Ezr 2:26; Neh 7:30) the name GEBA SEE GEBA(q.v.).
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Gaba (2)
(evidently a form of the Heb. , i.e., hill; SEE GIBEAH ), a town mentioned by Josephus, and always in connection with Ptolemais: it was destroyed by he insurgent Jews in the time of Florus (War, 2:10-3:1, v.r. and ); it adjoined Matthew Carmel, and was called “the city of horsemen” ( ), because those horsemen that were dismissed by Herocd dwelt there (War, 3:3, I, v.r. , , , ); but it was different from the Gibea () that lay about 20 stadia from Ptolemais (Life, 23), as this was apparently the Gibeah of Benjamin. Reland, who notices several ancient allusions to places of a similar name (Palest. page 269), thinks that the town in question was the modern Haffci, on the shore near Carmel (q.d. ), the Sycaminus of later writers (see Robinson, Researches, 3:194, note), a conclusion in which Schwarz coincides (Palest. page 69, note). SEE GABALA.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Gaba
GABA or GEBA. Jos 18:24, etc.
Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary
Gaba
gaba (, gabha’ (in pause)). See GEBA.
Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Gaba
[Ga’ba] See GEBA.
Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary
Gaba
Called also Geba, a city of Canaan allotted to Benjamin.
Jos 18:24; Ezr 2:26; Neh 7:30
Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible
Gaba
Ga’ba. The same name as Geba. See Geba.