Beulah (given name) explained

Beulah
Gender:female
Meaning:married
Language:Hebrew
Origin:Book of Isaiah

Beulah, a feminine given name, originated from the Hebrew word (Hebrew: בְּעוּלָ֑ה bə‘ūlāh), used in the Book of Isaiah as a prophesied attribute of the land of Israel. The King James Bible transliterates the word and translates it as "married" (see Isaiah 62:4). An alternative translation is "espoused", see for example Isaiah 62:4 (Mechon Mamre). The Online Etymology Dictionary relates the word to baal, meaning "owner, master, lord".

Literary works have used "Beulah" as the name of a mystical place, somewhere between Earth and Heaven. It was so used in The Pilgrim's Progress by John Bunyan and in the works of William Blake, for example several times in The Four Zoas.[1]

People with this name

Fictional characters

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Vala,_or_The_Four_Zoas The Four Zoas