Beit HaKerem (Bible)
Beit HaKerem (Hebrew: בית הכרם, lit. "house of the vineyard"; Beth HakKerem in Biblical Hebrew) is a biblical place associated with the Tribe of Judah (Nehemiah 3:14).
Some identify Beit HaKerem with Ein Kerem. Others place Beit HaKerem south of Jerusalem, at Ramat Rachel, where cairns on the ridge may have served as beacons of old.[1] Others say it was near Tekoa, later known as Herodium.[2][3] According to the Bible, the trumpet sounded against the invading army of Babylon at this place (Jeremiah 6:1).
Beit Hakerem was a district center during the Persian Period, (Nehemiah 3:14). Archeological finds at Ramat Rachel have yielded dozens of seal impressions on jar handles from the 4th-3rd centuries BCE bearing the inscription yehud, the official name of the province of Judah in this period.[1]
References
- "Ramat Rahel - A Royal Citadel and a Palace of the Last Kings of Judah", Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs website, June 24 2001. Retrieved on September 9, 2011
- "Bethhaccerem", Smith's Bible Dictionary. Retrieved on September 9, 2011.
- Morris Jastrow Jr. and Frants Buhl. "BETH-HACCEREM", JewishEncyclopedia.com. Retrieved on September 9, 2011