Bible Commentary

Ezekiel 27:22

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezekiel 27:22

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

Sheba. The Sabaea of the Greeks. It is applied, in and , to a grandson of Cush; in and , to a son of Joktan; and in and , to a grandson of Abraham.

Geographically, in Ezekiel's time it probably included the South-Arabian region, that of Yemen, or Arabia Felix, and was famous, as in the history of the Queen of Sheba, for its gold, gems, and spices (, ; , ).

Raamah. Named in as father of the Cushite Sheba, and probably, therefore, connected with it ethnologically and geographically. The chief of all spices had probably a technical name, like the "principal spices" of and So for the genuine balsam, the product of the Amyris opobalsamum, which is found between Mecca and Medina.

The precious stones includes onyx, rubies, agates, and cornelians found in the mountains of Hadramant, and the jaspers and crystals of Yemen. In the Rhammanitae, mentioned by Strabo as a Sabaean tribe (16:782), we have, perhaps, a survival of the old name.

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