Rimmon Explained

Rimmon or Rimon (Hebrew: רִמּוֹן|Rīmmōn) is a Hebrew word meaning 'pomegranate'. It appears as a name in the Hebrew Bible where, when translated to Greek, it takes the form Remmon Ρεμμων, Remmōn).

Hebrew Bible

Place-names

Rimmon may refer to:

Biblical figure

Rimon is mentioned as a man of Beeroth of the tribe of Benjamin, whose two sons, Baanah and Rechab, were captains of the army of Ish-bosheth, son of King Saul.[2]

Syrian deity

See main article: Hadad.

Rimmon ("pomegranate" in Hebrew)[3] [4] was a Syrian deity mentioned in the Second Book of Kings (Kings 5:18), to whom a temple was dedicated. In Syria, this storm god was also known as Hadad (interpreted to mean "the breast" in Biblical Hebrew)[5] [6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: M. G. Easton. Illustrated Bible Dictionary. October 2006 . Cosimo, Inc.. 978-1-59605-947-4. 585.
  2. Samuel 4:2
  3. Encyclopedia: Tenney . Merrill C. . Merrill C. Tenney . Rimmon . The Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible . 1975 . BibleGateway . Rimmon - Encyclopedia of the Bible - Bible Gateway . 29 July 2024 . Citing A. Saarisalo, Topographical Researches in Galilee, JPOS, IX (1929), pp. 27-40; F.-M. AbelGéographie de la Palestine, II (1938), pp. 437 and passim; W. F. Albright, The List of Levitic CitiesLouis Ginzberg Jubilee Volume (1945), English section, pp. 49-73; Y. AharoniThe Land of the Bible (1967).
  4. Book: Klein, Reuven Chaim . 2018 . God versus Gods: Judaism in the Age of Idolatry . Mosaica Press . 351–354 . 978-1946351463 . 27322748M . 29 July 2024.
  5. Web site: Klein . Reuven Chaim . August 2017 . Nursing from the Good . Ohr Somayach . What's in a Word? .
  6. Kings 5:19
  7. http://literaryballadarchive.com/PDF/Kipling_28_Rimmon.pdf Rimmon
  8. Book: The Urantia Book: First Preaching Tour of Galilee, paper 146:1. 1637.
  9. Klein (2018), pp.[323-[https://books.google.com/books?id=Dx9xDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA324 324]. or Baal ("the Lord"), and in Assyria as Ramanu ("the thunderer", when borrowed from Akkadian - cf. Akkadian ramanu, "to roar").

    According to the biblical narrative, the Aramean commander Naaman, having been healed of his leprosy by the Israelite prophet Elisha, requested pardon from God for continuing to minister to the King of Syria who would continue to worship in the Temple of Rimmon. Elisha granted him this pardon.[6]

    Extra-biblical usage

    • "Rimmon", a poem by Rudyard Kipling written in 1903 after the Boer War.[7]
    • According to The Urantia Book, allegedly revealed by celestial beings and published in 1955 in the US, Rimmon was a small city in the region of Galilee which "had once been dedicated to the worship of a Babylonian god of the air, Ramman"[8] (see Hadad/Ramman).

    See also

    External links