Biblia

Tel-melah

Tel-melah

Tel-melah

(Heb. Tel-me’lach, , salt hill; Sept. and , v.r. and ; Vulg. Thelmala) is joined with Tel-harsa and Cherub as the name of a place where the Jews returned who had lost their pedigree after the Captivity (Ezr 2:59; Nehemiah 3:61). It is perhaps the Thelme of Ptolemy (5, 20), which some wrongly read as Theane ( for ), a city of the low salt tract near the Persian Gulf,’ whence probably the name (Gesen. Lex. Heb. s.v.). Cherub, which may be pretty surely identified with Ptolemy’s Chiripha (), was in the same region. Herzfeld (Gesch. Tsr. 1, 452) insists that it designates the province of Melitene according to Ptolemy (6,3), adjoining Susiana west of the Tigris; but Ptolemy (5, 7, 5) and Pliny (6, 3) know only a Melitene on the border of Cappadocia and Armenia Major.

Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature

Tel-melah

hill of salt, a place in Babylon from which the Jews returned (id.).

Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary

Tel-Melah

Connected with Telharsa and Cherub (Chiripha, in Ptolemy). Thelme (Ptolemy 5:20) or “hill of salt,” a city of the low salt district near the Persian gulf (Gesenins).

Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary

Tel-Melah

tel-mela (, tel-melah, hill of salt): A Babylonian town mentioned in Ezr 2:59; Neh 7:61 with Tel-harsha and Cherub (see TEL-HARSHA). It possibly lay on the low salt tract near the Persian Gulf. In 1 Esdras 5:36 it is called Thermeleth.

Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia

Tel-Melah

H8528

A place in Babylonia.

Ezr 2:59; Neh 7:61

Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible

Tel-melah

Tel-me’lah. See Tel-Harsa.

Fuente: Smith’s Bible Dictionary