Sea of Chinnereth
Sea Of Chinnereth
(; Sept. [] , Num 24:11; Jos 13:27) or CHINNEROTH (, , Jos 12:3), the inland sea, which is most familiarly known to us by its New- Test. name as the “Lake of Gennesareth,” or the “Sea of Tiberias” or “of Galilee.” This is evident from the mode in which it is mentioned in various passages in the Pentateuch and Joshua as being at the end of Jordan, opposite to the ” Sea of the Arabah,” i.e. the Dead Sea, as having the Arabah or Ghor below it, etc. (Deuteronomy in, 17; Jos 11:2; Jos 13:3. In the two former of these passages the word “sea” is perhaps omitted). The word is by some derived from the Hebrews , Kinnur’ (, cithara), a “harp,” as if in allusion to the oval shape of the lake. But it is possible that Cinnereth was an ancient Canaanite name existing long prior to the Israelite conquest, and, like other names, adopted by the Israelites into their language. The subsequent name “Gennesar” was derived from “Cinnereth” by a change of letters of a kind frequent in the East. SEE GENNESARETH
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Sea of Chinnereth
kine-reth. See GALILEE, SEA OF.