Easton's Bible Dictionary

(Kiana) #1

[round] cake of barley bread” (Judges 7:13). In Leviticus 2 is a list of the
different kinds of bread and cakes which were fit for offerings.



  • CALAH one of the most ancient cities of Assyria. “Out of that land he
    [i.e., Nimrod] went forth into Assyria, and built Nineveh, Rehoboth-Ir,
    and Calah, and Resen” (Genesis 10:11, R.V.). Its site is now marked
    probably by the Nimrud ruins on the left bank of the Tigris. These cover
    an area of about 1,000 acres, and are second only in size and importance to
    the mass of ruins opposite Mosul. This city was at one time the capital of
    the empire, and was the residence of Sardanapalus and his successors
    down to the time of Sargon, who built a new capital, the modern
    Khorsabad. It has been conjectured that these four cities mentioned in
    Genesis 10:11 were afterwards all united into one and called Nineveh
    (q.v.).

  • CALAMUS the Latin for cane, Hebrew Kaneh, mentioned (Exodus 30:23)
    as one of the ingredients in the holy anointing oil, one of the sweet scents
    (Cant. 4:14), and among the articles sold in the markets of Tyre (Ezekiel
    27:19). The word designates an Oriental plant called the “sweet flag,” the
    Acorus calamus of Linnaeus. It is elsewhere called “sweet cane” (Isaiah
    43:24; Jeremiah 6:20). It has an aromatic smell, and when its knotted stalk
    is cut and dried and reduced to powder, it forms an ingredient in the most
    precious perfumes. It was not a native of Palestine, but was imported from
    Arabia Felix or from India. It was probably that which is now known in
    India by the name of “lemon grass” or “ginger grass,” the Andropogon
    schoenanthus. (See CANE.)

  • CALCOL (1 Chronicles 2:6), sustenance, the same probably as Chalcol
    (1 Kings 4:31), one of the four sages whom Solomon excelled in wisdom;
    for “he was wiser than all men.”

  • CALEB a dog. (1.) One of the three sons of Hezron of the tribe of Judah.
    He is also called Chelubai (1 Chronicles 2:9). His descendants are
    enumerated (18-20, 42-49).


(2.) A “son of Hur, the firstborn of Ephratah” (1 Chronicles 2:50). Some
would read the whole passage thus: “These [i.e., the list in ver. 42-49]
were the sons of Caleb. The sons of Hur, the firstborn of Ephratah, were
Shobal, etc.” Thus Hur would be the name of the son and not the father of
Caleb (ver. 19).

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