A Trip Abroad eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about A Trip Abroad.

A Trip Abroad eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about A Trip Abroad.
and from four to fourteen miles in width, and is called the Arabah.  The sources of the Jordan are one hundred and thirty-four miles from the mouth, but the numerous windings of the stream make it two hundred miles long.  The Jordan is formed by the union of three streams issuing from springs at an elevation of seventeen hundred feet above the sea.  The principal source is the spring at Dan, one of the largest in the world, as it sends forth a stream twenty feet wide and from twenty to thirty inches deep.  The spring at Banias, the Caesarea Philippi of the Scriptures, is the eastern source.  The Hashbany flows from a spring forming the western source.  A few miles south of the union of the streams above mentioned the river widens into the waters of Merom, a small lake nearly on a level with the Mediterranean.  In the next few miles it descends rapidly, and empties into the Sea of Galilee, called also the Sea of Chinnereth, Sea of Tiberias, and Lake of Gennesaret.  In the sixty-five miles from the Sea of Galilee to the Dead Sea the fall is about six hundred feet.  The rate of descent is not uniform throughout the whole course of the river.  In one section it drops sixty feet to the mile, while there is one stretch of thirteen miles with a descent of only four and a half feet to the mile.  The average is twenty-two feet to the mile.  The width varies from eighty to one hundred and eighty feet, and the depth from five to twelve feet.  Caesarea Philippi, at the head of the valley, Capernaum, Magdala, Tiberias, and Tarrichaea were cities on the Sea of Galilee.  Jericho and Gilgal were in the plain at the southern extremity, and Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, and Zeboim, upon which the wrath of God was poured, were somewhere in the region of the Dead Sea.

The Eastern Table-Land has a mountain wall four thousand feet high facing the river.  This table-land, which is mostly fertile, extends eastward about twenty miles, and terminates in the Arabian Desert, which is still higher.  Here the mountains are higher and steeper than those west of the Jordan.  Mt.  Hermon, in the north, is nine thousand two hundred feet high.  South of the Jarmuk River is Mt.  Gilead, three thousand feet high, and Mt.  Nebo, lying east of the northern end of the Dead Sea, reaches an elevation of two thousand six hundred and seventy feet.  Besides the Jarmuk, another stream, the Jabbok, flows into the Jordan from this side.  The Arnon empties into the Dead Sea.  The northern section was called Bashan, the middle, Gilead, and the southern part, Moab.  Bashan anciently had many cities, and numerous ruins yet remain.  In the campaign of Israel against Og, king of Bashan, sixty cities were captured.  Many events occurred in Gilead, where were situated Jabesh-Gilead, Ramoth-Gilead, and the ten cities of the Decapolis, with the exception of Beth-shean, which was west of the Jordan.  From the summit of Mt.  Pisgah, a peak of Mt.  Nebo, Moses viewed the Land of Promise, and from these

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A Trip Abroad from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.