Dumah standard
(2) a town in the highlands of Judah between Hebron and Beersheba, now ed-Daume (Jos 15:52);
Where is Dumah in the Bible?
Dumah in the Bible refers to several related places and peoples in the ancient Near East. Most prominently, Dumah was an Ishmaelite tribe descended from Ishmael, mentioned in Genesis 25:14 and 1 Chronicles 1:30, which founded the Arabian town of Dumat-el-Jandal in what is now Saudi Arabia. The prophet Isaiah addressed Dumah with an oracle in Isaiah 21:11-12, speaking of a watchman on the walls and the coming of morning, which scholars often interpret as a prophecy concerning the region of Arabia or Edom. Additionally, there was a town named Dumah in the highlands of Judah between Hebron and Beersheba, identified with the modern site of ed-Daume. The name Dumah also appears as a symbolic designation for Edom in biblical prophecy.
In Scripture1 biblical book; 1 with study content
- Isaiah
Dumah
ISBE 1915 (Public Domain)(2) a town in the highlands of Judah between Hebron and Beersheba, now ed-Daume (Jos 15:52);
(3) an emblematical designation of Edom in the obscure oracle (Isa 21:11,12);
(4) an Ishmaelite tribe in Arabia (Ge 25:14; 1Ch 1:30). According to the Arabic geographies this son of Ishmael rounded the town of Dumat-el-Jandal, the stone-built Dumah, so called to distinguish it from another Dumah near the Euphrates. The former now bears the name of the Jauf ("belly"), being a depression situated half-way between the head of the Persian Gulf and the head of the gulf of Akaba. Its people in the time of Mohammed were Christians of the tribe of Kelb. It contained a great well from which the palms and crops were irrigated. It has often been visited by European travelers in recent times. See Jour. Royal Geog. Soc., XXIV (1854), 138-58; W. G. Palgrave, Central and Eastern Arabia, chapter ii. It is possible that the oracle in Isa (number 3 above) concerns this place.
Thomas Hunter Weir
dum (alam, 'illem, literally, "tied in the tongue"; kophos): Used either as expressing the physical condition of speechlessness, generally associated with deafness, or figuratively as meaning the silence produced by the