-
According to the Bible, the
Tribe of Gad (Hebrew: גָּד, Modern: Gad, Tiberian: Gāḏ, "soldier" or "luck") was one of the
Twelve Tribes of
Israel who, after...
- Tiglath-Pileser III of ****yria (ruled 745–727 BC)
deported the Reubenites,
Gadites, and the half-tribe of Man****eh to "Halah, Habor, Hara, and the
Gozan River...
-
surrounded by
Gadites.
Yohanan Aharoni interpreted the
description in
Numbers as
referring to the
actual distribution of
Reubenites and
Gadites around the...
-
identified as Danites, Asherites, Zebulunites, Issacharites,
Naphtalites and
Gadites.
These inhabitants do not have a
significant history of
migration besides...
- Then they
conquer the
lands of Og and
Sihon in Transjordan,
settling the
Gadites, Reubenites, and half the
Tribe of Man****eh there.
Moses then addresses...
- A
Gadite (Numbers 2:14),
called also
Deuel (Hebrew: דְּעוּאֵל, Modern: Dəʿūʾēl, Tiberian: Dŭʿūʾēl) (Numbers 1:14; 7:42); the
father of the
Gadite prince...
-
mountains (Psalm 68:15).
Bashan is also
mentioned in 1
Chronicles 5:16: "[The
Gadites]
lived in Gilead, in
Bashan and its
outlying villages, and on all the pasturelands...
-
Shapham is
mentioned in p****ing once in the
Hebrew Bible, in a list of
Gadites (1
Chronicles 5:12). Shaphat, the son of Hori of the
house of Simeon, was...
- the Israelites.
According to
First Chronicles 5:18-22, the Reubenites,
Gadites, and the half of the
tribe of Man****eh in
Gilead brought 44,760 to battle...
- king of ****yria, and he
carried them away, even the Reubenites, and the
Gadites, and the half
tribe of Man****eh, and
brought them unto Halah, and Habor...