Kidomiyon

Kidomiyon, also Kirmion and the Keramyon, was one of the four rivers of Ancient Israel.

The others were Yarden, Yarmoch and Pigah, probably tributaries of the River Jordan.The Babylonian TalmudBava Basra 74b, fn. 46, found at [http://www.halakhah.com/bababathra/bababathra_74.html Come and Hear website]. Accessed June 17, 2009.Other translators state that the Yarden is the same thing as the Jordan, and name the Kidomiyon (or the Kirmion or the Keramyon) as a separate river. See, Rabbi Joseph Schwarz, Descriptive Geography and Brief Historical Sketch of Palestine, Explanation of the Seas, Rivers, Mountains, and Valleys of Palestine. (A. Hart, 1850), p. 41, found at [http://www.jewish-history.com/palestine/seas.html Jewish History online] and [https://books.google.com/books?id=-CUAAAAAQAAJ&dq=Pigah+%2B+talmud+-Pisgah&pg=PA41 Google Books]. See also, Michael A. Fishbane, Biblical myth and rabbinic mythmaking, p. 316, (Oxford University Press, 2003)

{{ISBN|978-0-19-826733-1}} found at [https://books.google.com/books?id=17Gbl88xFZ8C&dq=Pigah+%2B+talmud+-Pisgah&pg=RA1-PA316 Google Books]. Both accessed June 17, 2009. It is also known in French as le Kirmion,A French language translation states, "Les quatre fleuves sont le Jourdain, le Yarmouk, le Kirmion et le Pigah. Nous connaissons le Jourdain. ... Quant au Pigah, nous ne le connaissons pas." LA PALESTINE AU TEMPS DE JÉSUS-CHRIST: CHAPITRE XIV: LA SCIENCE, found at [http://www.regard.eu.org/Livres.6/Palestine.au.temps.de.JC/27.html regard.eu.org website]. Accessed June 17, 2009. and in Latin as KirmionA Latin translation states, "Iarmoch Plinio Hieramax, Kirmion, Pigah seu Pharphar, Nehel Escol etc." J.J. Hofmann: Lexicon universale, (1698) (excerpts from machine-readable version with annotation of references to the Bible), found at [http://www.uni-mannheim.de/mateo/camenahtdocs/bib_demo/hof_p.html University of Mannheim website]. Accessed June 17, 2009.

References

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Category:Talmud places

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