Almon (Hastings' Dictionary)
See Allemeth. ALMONDIBLATHAIM {r^C',i\)q.Tp% Nu SS"-"). — A station in the joumeyings, prob. identical with Bethdiblatliaim, Jer 48'''. The meaning of the word Diblutliaim is a double cake of figs ; its application to a town may indicate the appear- ance of the place or neighbourhood. Conder suggests ' two di-scs ' with reference to some altar- stone or dolmen (cf. Heth and Moab, p. 262). A. T. Chapman. ALMOND (npp* shAl^d). ShAkM is, like many names of plants, u.
sed for both the plant and its fruit. Thus in Ec 12* and Jer 1", the reference is to the tree, while in Gn 43", Ex 25"-« 37'»» Nu 17', the reference is to the fruit. The Arab, name for the almond is Inuz. The same word occurs once in OT (Gn 3lF), where it is wrongly translated in AV Hazel. The Heb. equivalent, nS, is undoubtedly another name for the almond, probably the more ancient one. The almond, Amt/rfdalus crnnmunis, L., belongs to the order Rosaceae, tribe Amj-gdalea?
, and is a tree with an oblong or spherical comus, from fifteen to thirty feet high. The branches are somewhat straggling, especially in the wild state. The leaves are lanceolate, serrate, acute, three to four inches long, and most of them fall during the winter. About midwinter the bare tree is suddenly covered with blos-soms, an inch to an incli and a half broad. Although the petals are pale pink toward their ba.
se, they are usually whitish toward their tips, and the general etfect of an almond tree in blossom is white. As there are no leaves on the tree when the blossoms come out, the whole tree appears a nia-ns of white, and the eflect of a large number of them, interspersed among the dark- green foliage and golden fniit of the lemon and orange, and the feathery tops of the palms, is to give an indescribable charm to the January and Febru- ary landscapes in the orchards of the large cities of Pal.
and Syria. Soon after blossoming, the delicate petals liegin to fall in soft, snowy showers on the ground under and aroun<t the trees, and their place is taken by the young fniit ; and, at the same time, the young leaves begin to open, and the tree is covered with foliage in March. The young fruit consists of an oblong, flattened, downy pod, which often attains a length of two an<l a naif to three inches, and a thickness of two-thirds of an inch.
This pod is called in Arab, kttr'aun el-lauz, and just before ripening it has a crisp, cucumber-like consistence, and a pleasant acid taste, which are greatly liked by the peojile. It is hawked about the streets during the months of April and May, and eaten with great relish, especially by children. At this stage the shell of the nut is yet soft, and the kernel juicy with a slight smack of peach, stone flavour.
Very soon, however, the succulent flesh of the outer envelope loses its juice, and dries around the hardening shell, to which it forms a shrunken, leathery envelope. The kernel acquires firmne.ss, and in early summer the nut is ripe. It is then from an inch to an inch and a half long. Almonds are, and always have been, a favourite luxury of the Orientals (Gn 43"). They make a delicious confection of the hulled kernels, by beating them into a paste with sugar in a mortar.
This paste, moulded into various shapes, is called hnrUet-el- lauz. The half kernels are spread over several sorts of blancmange, called nuilydlibtyek, and nashawiyeh, and mughli. Almonds are also sugared as \vith us. There are several species of wild almond in Pal. and Syria. (1) The wild state of Ami/ijdnlns cam- munis, L., a stunted tree, with smaller blossoms and pods, and small bitter nuts. Some of the varieties of this have leaves less than an inch long. (2) A. Orientals, Ait.
, a shrub with spinescent branches, small silvery leaves, and bitter nuts, three-quarters of an inch long. (3) A. lycioides, Spacli, a shrub with intricate, stiff, spiny branches, linear-lanceolat'e, green leaves, and a bitter nut half an inch long. (4) A. /tpartiaiiles, Spach, a shrub with few linear-lanceolate leaves, and bitter nuts, a little over half an inch long. All of tlieso share more or less the peculiarities of flowering and fruiting which belong to the cultivated al- mond. The Heb.
word for almond signifies the ' waker,' in allusion to its being the first tree to wake to life in the winter. The word also contains the signifi- cation of ' watching ' and 'hastening.' In Jer 1" the word for ' almond tree ' is sM/U'd, and the word for ' I will hasten ' (v.^-), shuk^d, from the same root. The almond was the emblem of the divine forwardness in bringin;' God's promises to pass.
A similar instance in tlie name of another rosa- ceous plant is the apricot, which was named from prwcdcui (early) on account of its blossoms apjiear- ing early in the spring, and its fruit ripening earlier than its congener the peach (Pliny, xv. 11). The usual interi)retation of Ec 12° ' the almond tree shall flourish,' is that the old man's hair shall turn white like the almond tree. To this Gesenius objects, that the blossom of the almond is pink, not white.
He prefers to translate the word for flourish by .y>um or reject, making the old man reject the almond because he has no teeth to eat it. Hut this objection has no force. The pink colour of the almond blo.ssom is very light, usually mainly at the base of the [>etals, and fades as they open, and the general eflect of the tree as seen at a dis- tance is snowy-white. The state of the teeth Im.'^ already been alluded to (v.')
, 'and the grinder's cease because they are few,' and ' the sound of the grinding is low.' We may therefore retain the beautiful imagery which brings to mind the silver hair of the aged, and draw from the snowy blossom the promise of the coming fruit. G. E. Post.
This topic also has an entry in the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Both articles offer independent scholarly perspectives.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia on Almon
Almon al'-mon (`almon, "hidden"): A Levitical city in the tribe of Benjamin (Jos 21:18), the same as "Allemeth" the Revised Version (British and American), "Alemeth" the King James Version, of 1Ch 6:60 (which see). ⇒See a list of verses on ALMON in the Bible. ⇒See the definition of almoner in the KJV Dictionary ⇒See also the McClintock and Strong Biblical Cyclopedia.
Smith's Bible Dictionary on Almon
(concealed) a city within the tribe of Benjamin, with “suburbs” given to the priests. (Joshua 21:18) [Alemeth]
References
- Orr, J. (ed.) (1915) The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Chicago: Howard-Severance Company. [Public Domain]
- Easton, M.G. (1893) Easton's Bible Dictionary. 3rd edn. Thomas Nelson. [Public Domain]
- Nave, O.J. (1897) Nave's Topical Bible. Topical Bible Publishing Co.. [Public Domain]
- Hastings, J. (ed.) (1909) A Dictionary of the Bible. Edinburgh: T&T Clark. [Public Domain]
- Smith, W. (ed.) (1884) Smith's Bible Dictionary. London: John Murray. [Public Domain]
- Fausset, A.R. (1878) Fausset's Bible Dictionary. [Public Domain]A Critical and Expository Bible Cyclopaedia
