Abila (Peraea)

Tall el-Hammam that is identified by most scholars as Abel-Shittim.

31°50′59″N 35°40′43″E / 31.84972°N 35.67861°E / 31.84972; 35.67861

Abila (Arabic: ابيلا) was an ancient city east of the Jordan River in the Plains of Moab, later Peraea, near Livias, about twelve km northeast of the north shore of the Dead Sea.[citation needed] The site is identified with modern Khirbet el-Kafrayn, Jordan and identified on the Madaba Map as an unnamed icon.[1][2][3] There is a widely supported theory that in the Hebrew Bible, it is referred to as Abel-Shittim, as well as in the shorter forms Shittim and Ha-Shittim.[4][5][6][7][8][9]

  1. ^ Glueck (1943), pp. 7–26 (see 15, 21).
  2. ^ Glueck (1951), p. 377.
  3. ^ Graves & Stripling (2007)
  4. ^ Thomson (1886)
  5. ^ Glueck (1951), p. 378.
  6. ^ Glueck (1943), p. 15.
  7. ^ Miller & Tucker (1974)
  8. ^ Harrison (1983)
  9. ^ MacDonald (2000)

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