STRONGS G1695:
Ἐμμαούς (in Josephus also
Ἀμμαούς),
ἡ,
Emmaus (Latin genitive
-untis), a village 30 stadia from Jerusalem (according to the true reading [so Dindorf and Bekker] in Josephus,
b. j. 7, 6, 6; not, as is commonly said, following the authority of Luke, 60 stadia), apparently represented by the modern
Kulonieh (cf.
Ewald, Gesch. des Volkes Israel, 2te Ausg. 6, p. 675f; [
Caspari, Chronological and Geographical Introduction to the Life of Christ § 191;
Sepp, Jerus. u. d. heil. Land, 1:52]):
Luke 24:13. There was a town of the same name in the level country of Judæa, 175 stadia from Jerusalem, noted for its hot springs and for the slaughter of the Syrians routed by Judas Maccabaeus, 1 Macc. 3:40, 57; afterwards fortified by Bacchides, the Syrian leader, 1 Macc. 9:50, and from the 3rd century on called
Nicopolis [
B. D., under the word Emmaus or Nicopolis]. A third place of the same name was situated near Tiberias, and was famous for its medicinal springs. Cf. Keim, 3, p. 555f (English translation, 6:306f);
Wolff in Riehm, p. 376f; [especially
Hackett in
B. D. American edition, p. 731].
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