Arimathea or Ramah
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Arimathea or Ramah

(Dual, Ramathaim,) A city whence came Joseph the counselor, in whose new tomb the body of Jesus laid, Matthew 27:57 John 19:38. We learn from Eusebius and Jerome that this city was near Lydia, a town twenty-four miles northwest of Jerusalem. It has generally been located at the modern Ramleh, a town near Lydda, of 3,000 inhabitants, in which the route from Egypt to Syria crosses that from Egypt to Syria crosses that from Jerusalem to Joppa. But its site is rather to be sought a few miles east of Lydda, from Samaria to Judea, which may account for Luke's calling it "a city of the Jews," Luke 23:51. It has been supposed to be the same place as the Ramah of Mount Ephraim, the birthplace and residence of Samuel. This was called also Ramathaim-Zophim, 1 Samuel 1:1,19, from which name the from Arimathea is readily derived. See RAMAH.

Greek
707. Harimathaia -- Arimathea, probably a city near Jer.
... Word Origin of Hebrew origin, cf. Ramah Definition Arimathea, probably a
city near Jer. NASB Word Usage Arimathea (4). Arimathaea. ...
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