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  2. Dedan (Bible) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedan_(Bible)

    Dedan has several different meanings in the Hebrew Bible. Dedan (now part of Al-'Ula, Saudi Arabia) was an oasis and city-state of north-western Arabia. The people of Dedan are called Dedanim or Dedanites. Dedan is also the name of the son of Raamah and the son of Jokshan.

  3. Generations of Noah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generations_of_Noah

    The sons of Kūš are Sebā [62] and Ḥawīlah [63] and Savtah [64] and Raʻamah and Savteḫā, [65] [while the sons of Raʻamah are Ševā and Dedan]. [66] The names of their diocese are called Sīnīrae, [d] and Hīndīqī, [e] Samarae, [f] Lūbae, [67] Zinğae, [g] while the sons of Mauretinos [h] are [the inhabitants of] Zemarğad and ...

  4. Dedan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedan

    Dedan, an ancient Arabian city-state located in the oasis of al-ʿUla; for the kingdom in its later phase, see Lihyan; for the city in the Bible, see Dedan (Bible) Dedan State, a former princely state in Gujarat, western India; Dedan Kimathi, a leader of the Kenyan Mau Mau revolt; Dedan, a major antagonist of the independent video game Off

  5. Lihyan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lihyan

    Lihyan (Arabic: لحيان, Liḥyān; Greek: Lechienoi), [1] also called Dadān or Dedan, was a powerful and highly organized ancient Arab kingdom that played a vital cultural and economic role in the north-western region of the Arabian Peninsula and used Dadanitic language. [2]

  6. Biblical terminology for race - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_terminology_for_race

    Dedan, son of Raamah Sabtechah , son of Cush Nimrod : in verses 10–12 he is the founder of a list of Mesopotamian cities, and the biblical tradition elsewhere identifies him with northern Mesopotamia or Assyria. [ 20 ]

  7. Tarshish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarshish

    The 19th-century "World as Peopled by the Descendants of Noah", showing "Tarshish" as the countryside around Tarsus in southeastern Anatolia. Esarhaddon, Aššur Babylon E (AsBbE) [5] preserves "All the kings from the lands surrounded by sea – from the country Iadanana (Cyprus) and Iaman, as far as Tarsisi (Tarshish) – bowed to my feet."

  8. Naming of the Americas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naming_of_the_Americas

    Gerardus Mercator applied the names North and South America on his influential 1538 world map; by this point, the naming was irrevocable. [20] Acceptance may have been aided by the "natural poetic counterpart" that the name America made with Asia, Africa, and Europa. [13]

  9. Assyrian people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assyrian_people

    A map of the Neo-Assyrian Empire under Shalmaneser III (dark green) and Esarhaddon (light green) In the traditions of the Assyrian Church of the East, they are descended from Abraham's grandson, Dedan son of Jokshan, progenitor of the ancient Assyrians. [63] However, there is no other historical basis for this assertion.