Study Dictionary
NAVE: Hassenaah Senaah
EBD: Senaah
SMITH: HASSENAAH SENAAH
ISBE: HASSENAAH SENAAH
Hassenaah
In Bible versions:
Hassenaah: NET AVS NIV NRSV NASB TEVSenaah: NET AVS NIV NRSV NASB TEV
father of the men who rebuilt the fish gate of Jerusalem
a town in Judah whose precise location is unknown
bramble; enemy ( --> same as Seneh)
a town in Judah whose precise location is unknown
bramble; enemy ( --> same as Seneh)
Hebrew
Strongs #05570: hano C@na'ah
Senaah or Hassenaah [with the article] = "thorny"1) ancestor of a family who returned from exile with Zerubbabel
5570 Cna'ah sen-aw-aw'
from an unused root meaning to prick; thorny; Senaah, a placein Palestine:-Senaah, Hassenaah (with the article).
Senaah [EBD]
thorny, a place many of the inhabitants of which returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel (Ezra 2:35; Neh. 7:38).
HASSENAAH [SMITH]
The Bene-Hassenaah rebuilt the fish-gate in the repair of the wall of Jerusalem. (Nehemiah 3:3) (B.C. 446.)SENAAH [SMITH]
(thorny). The "children (i.e. the inhabitants) of Senaah" are enumerated among the "people of Israel" who returned from the captivity with Zerubbabel. (Ezra 2:35; Nehemiah 7:38) (B.C. 536.) The Magdal Senna of Eusebius and Jerome denotes a town seven miles north of Jericho ("Senna").HASSENAAH [ISBE]
HASSENAAH - has-e-na'-a (haccena'ah): In Neh 3:3 the "sons of Hassenaah" are mentioned among the builders of the wall. Probably the same as Senaah (Ezr 2:35; Neh 7:38) with the definite article, i.e. has-Senaah. The latter, from the connection, would appear to be a place-name.See also HASSENUAH.
SENAAH [ISBE]
SENAAH - se-na'-a, sen'-a-a (cena'ah; Codex Vaticanus Sanana; Sananat; Codex Alexandrinus Sanana, Sennaa, Hasan): The children of Senaah are mentioned as having formed part of the company returning from the captivity with Zerubbabel (Ezr 2:35; Neh 7:38). The numbers vary as given by Ezr (3,630) and Neh (3,930), while 1 Esdras 5:23 puts them at 3,330. In the last place the name is Sanaas, the King James Version "Annaas" (Codex Vaticanus Sama; Codex Alexandrinus Sanaas). In Neh 3:3 the name occurs with the definite article, ha-senaah. The people may be identical with the Benjamite clan Hassenuah (1 Ch 9:7). Eusebius, in Onomasticon, speaks of Magdalsenna a village about 7 miles North of Jericho, which may be the place intended; but the site is not known.W. Ewing