Salchah
SALCHAH
A city of Bashan, conquered by the Jews and assigned to Manasseh, Deu 3:10 Jos 12:5 13:11. It was near the border of Gad, 1Ch 5:11, and where the boundary line between the two tribes ran out farthest into the desert. A town called Salchat still exists there, on the southeast border of the modern Hauran.
Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary
Salchah
(Deu 2:10). SEE SALCAH.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Salchah
A city belonging to Bashan beyond Jordan (Deu 3:10) If from Salah, perhaps the name means treading down.
Fuente: The Poor Mans Concordance and Dictionary to the Sacred Scriptures
Salchah
Sal’chah. (migration). A city named, in the early records of Israel, as the extreme limit of Bashan, Deu 3:10; Jos 13:11, and of the tribe of Gad. 1Ch 5:71. On another occasion , the name seems to denote a district, rather than a town. Jos 12:5. It is identical with the town of Sulkhad, (56 miles east of the Jordan, at the southern extremity of the Hauran range of mountains. The place is nearly deserted, though it contains 800 stone houses, many of them, in a good state of preservation. — Editor).