Hara
Bible Usage:
- Hara used once.
- Bible Reference: 1 Chronicles 5:26
Dictionaries:
- Included in Eastons: Yes
- Included in Hitchcocks: Yes
- Included in Naves: Yes
- Included in Smiths: Yes
- Included in Websters: No
- Included in Strongs: Yes
- Included in Thayers: No
- Included in BDB: Yes
Strongs Concordance:
- H2024 Used 1 time
Mountainous land, a province of Assyria (1 Chronicles 5:26), between the Tigris and the Euphrates, along the banks of the Khabur, to which some of the Israelite captives were carried. It has not been identified. Some think the word a variation of Haran.
a hill; showing forth
A place in Assyria, Israelitish captives carried to.
1 Chronicles 5:26
(mountain land), (1 Chronicles 5:26) only, is either a place utterly unknown or it must be regarded as identical with Haran or Charran.
Fright; fear, the twenty-fifth station of the Israelites in their wanderings (Numbers 33:24).
well of great fear
One of the camps of Israel.
Numbers 33:24-25
(fear), a desert station of the Isr'lites, (Numbers 33:24,25) its position is uncertain.
1. Heb. haran; i.e., "mountaineer." The eldest son of Terah, brother of Abraham and Nahor, and father of Lot, Milcah, and Iscah. He died before his father (Genesis 11:27), in Ur of the Chaldees.
2. Heb. haran, i.e., "parched;" or probably from the Accadian charana, meaning "a road." A celebrated city of Western Asia, now Harran, where Abram remained, after he left Ur of the Chaldees, till his father Terah died (Genesis 11:31, 32), when he continued his journey into the land of Canaan. It is called "Charran" in the LXX. and in Acts 7:2. It is called the "city of Nahor" (Genesis 24:10), and Jacob resided here with Laban (30:43). It stood on the river Belik, an affluent of the Euphrates, about 70 miles above where it joins that river in Upper Mesopotamia or Padan-aram, and about 600 miles northwest of Ur in a direct line. It was on the caravan route between the east and west. It is afterwards mentioned among the towns taken by the king of Assyria (2 Kings 19:12; Isaiah 37:12). It was known to the Greeks and Romans under the name Carrhae.
3. The son of Caleb of Judah (1 Chronicles 2:46) by his concubine Ephah.
mountainous country
1. Father of Lot and brother of Abraham
Genesis 11:26-31
2. Son of Caleb
1 Chronicles 2:46
3. A Levite
1 Chronicles 23:9
4. Called also Charran
A place in Mesopotamia to which Terah and Abraham migrated
Genesis 11:31; Genesis 12:4-5; Acts 7:4
Death of Terah at
Genesis 11:32
Abraham leaves by divine command
Genesis 12:1-5
Jacob flees to
Genesis 27:43; Genesis 28:7; Genesis 1:29
Jacob returns from, with Rachel and Leah
Genesis 31:17-21
Conquest of, by king of Assyria
2 Kings 19:12
Merchants of
Ezekiel 27:23
Idolatry in
Joshua 24:2; Joshua 24:14; Isaiah 37:12
(a mountaineer).
- The third son of Terah, and therefore youngest brother of Abram. (Genesis 11:26) (B.C. 1926.) Three children are ascribed to him
Lot, vs. (Genesis 11:27,31) and two daughters, viz., Milcah, who married her uncle Nahor, ver. (Genesis 11:29) and Iscah. ver. (Genesis 11:29) Haran was born in Ur of the Chaldees, and he died there while his father was still living. ver. (Genesis 11:28)
- A Gershonite Levite in the time of David, one of the family of Shimei. (1 Chronicles 23:9)
- A son of the great Caleb by his concubine Ephah. (1 Chronicles 2:46)
- HARAN or CHARRAN, (Acts 7:2,4) name of the place whither Abraham migrated with his family from Ur of the Chaldees, and where the descendants of his brother Nahor established themselves. Comp. (Genesis 24:10) with Genesis 27:43 It is said to be in Mesopotamia, (Genesis 24:10) or more definitely in Padan-aram, ch. (Genesis 25:20) the cultivated district at the foot of the hills, a name well applying to the beautiful stretch of country which lies below Mount Masius between the Khabour and the Euphrates. Here, about midway in this district, is a small village still called Harran . It was celebrated among the Romans, under the name of Charr', as the scene of the defeat of Crassus.
HARANGUE, noun harang'. har'ang.
1. A speech addressed to an assembly or an army; a popular oration; a public address. This word seems to imply loudness or declamation, and is therefore appropriated generally to an address made to a popular assembly or to an army, and not to a sermon, or to an argument at the bar of a court, or to a speech in a deliberative council, unless in contempt.
2. Declamation; a noisy, pompous or irregular address.
HARANGUE, verb intransitive harang'. To make an address or speech to a large assembly; to make a noisy speech.
HARANGUE, verb transitive harang'. To address by oration; as, the general harangued the troops.
HARANG'UER, noun harang'er. An orator; one who addresses an assembly or army; a noisy declaimer.
HARANG'UING, participle present tense Declaiming; addressing with noisy eloquence.
(the mountaineer), The. The destination of three of David's guard.
- Agee, a Hararite (2 Samuel 23:11)
- Shammah the Hararite. (2 Samuel 23:33)
- Sharar, (2 Samuel 23:33) or Sacar, (1 Chronicles 11:35) the Hararite, was the father of Ahiam, another member of the guard.
HAR'ASS, verb transitive
1. To weary; to fatigue to excess; to tire with bodily labor; as, to harass an army by a long march.
2. To weary with importunity, care, or perplexity; to tease; to perplex.
Nature oppress'd and harrass'd out with care.
3. To waste or desolate.
HAR'ASS, noun Waste; disturbance; devastation. [Little used.]
HAR'ASSED, participle passive Wearied; tired; teased.
HAR'ASSER, noun One who harasses or teases; a spoiler.
HAR'ASSING, participle present tense Tiring; fatiguing; teasing.
Bible Usage:
- Hara used once.
- Bible Reference: 1 Chronicles 5:26
Dictionaries:
- Included in Eastons: Yes
- Included in Hitchcocks: Yes
- Included in Naves: Yes
- Included in Smiths: Yes
- Included in Websters: No
- Included in Strongs: Yes
- Included in Thayers: No
- Included in BDB: Yes
Strongs Concordance:
- H2024 Used 1 time