- Bethharan
Bethharan (also Betharan or Beth Haran, Livias, and Julias) was a city of the
Amorite s in the ancientNear East , in the valley-plain east of theJordan River , about twelve miles fromJericho . According to theBook of Numbers of theHebrew Bible , Betharan was rebuilt by the tribe ofGad . ["Numbers" 32:36 [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Bible_%28King_James%29/Numbers#Chapter_32 Wikisource] ] In theBook of Joshua , a city called "Betharam" is listed as one of the cities allotted byMoses to Gad, one of the sons ofJacob . ["Joshua" 13:27 [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Bible_%28King_James%29/Joshua#13 Wikisource] ] as a city of theAmorite s.It was later fortified by
Herod Antipas , thetetrarch ofGalilee , who named it Livias in honor ofLivia , the wife of the Roman emperorAugustus . As she was later called Julia, the 1st-century Jewish historianJosephus speaks of the city as Julias. Having been burnt at the fall of Jerusalem in AD70 , it was restored by the Christians and became a bishopric. The site is identified by some withTell el Rameh , six miles east of the Jordan, by others withBeit Harran . [Corbett, John. "Betharan." "Catholic Encyclopedia". 1913. [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Catholic_Encyclopedia_%281913%29/Betharan Wikisource] ]ee also
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Livias (titular see) References
Catholic|Betharan "The original entry was written by John Corbett."
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