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Abana
Bible Dictionary Entry
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The Abana is one of the two rivers of
Damascus (the other being the Pharpar) mentioned by the
Syrian general Naaman in 864BC [Reese] as being “better than
all the waters of Israel” (2Kings 5:12). The rivers are not
mentioned anywhere else in scripture and their identities
have been disputed. However, the general consensus is that
the Abana River is the same as the Barada that flows through
Damascus. The following is a description of this river in
the late nineteenth century by William Ewing in Hasting’s
Dictionary of the Bible:
“This ‘river of Damascus,’ the Chrysorrhoas of the Greeks,
is identified with the Barada, to whose waters
Damascus owes her life. Rising in the uplands near Baalbee,
it drains the hollow in the bosom of Anti-Lebanon. ‘Ain
el Barada, in the plain of Zebedâny, swells the
stream, which then plunges down the deep picturesque gorge
of Wady Barada. About 14 miles N.W. of Damascus, in a
beautiful romantic spot in the heart of the hills, rises the
mighty fountain el Fijeh (Greek, a spring); a river
born in a moment, which, after a brief, foaming course,
joins the Barada, more than doubling its volume. It
then flows along the bottom of a deep, winding valley,
shaded by beautiful and fruitful trees; bare, yellow rocks
towering high on either hand above the green. About half the
water is led captive along the eastern bank towards the
city, the Beyrout [Beirut] road passing between the streams.
Just where the precipitous cliffs advance as if to close the
gorge, it escapes from the mountains, and, throwing itself
out fanlike in many branches, waters the plain, supplies the
city, and drains off into the northern two of the marshy
lakes eastward.”
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