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MEROM

Volume 13 · 180 words · 1815 Edition

in Ancient Geography. The waters of Merom, at which place Jabin and the other confederate kings met to fight (Joshua xi. 5.), are generally supposed by the learned to be the lake Semechon, which lies between the head of the river Jordan and the lake Gennearet; since it is agreed on all hands, that the city Hazor, where Jabin reigned, was situated upon this lake. But others think that the waters of Merom or Merome were somewhre about the brook Kishon, since there is a place of that name mentioned in the account of the battle against Sifera (Judg. v. 21.). And it is more rational to think, that the confederate kings advanced as far as the brook Kishon, and to a pass which led into the country, to hinder Joshua from penetrating it, or even to attack him in the country where he himself lay encamped, than to imagine that they waited for him in the midst of their own country; leaving all Galilee at his mercy, and the whole tract from the brook Kishon to the lake Semechon.