Word Summary
Gennēsaret: Gennesaret, a fertile plain on west shore of the Sea of Galilee
Original Word: ΓεννησαρέτTransliteration: Gennēsaret
Phonetic Spelling: (ghen-nay-sar-et')
Part of Speech: Proper Noun, Indeclinable
Short Definition: Gennesaret, a fertile plain on west shore of the Sea of Galilee
Meaning: Gennesaret -- a fertile plain on west shore of the Sea of Galilee
Strong's Concordance
Gennesaret.
Of Hebrew origin (compare Kinnrowth); Gennesaret (i.e. Kinnereth), a lake and plain in Palestine -- Gennesaret.
see HEBREW Kinnrowth
Thayer's Greek Lexicon
STRONGS NT 1082: ΓεννησαρέτΓεννησαρέτ (so
G T Tr WH),
Γεννησαρεθ (Lachmann in
Matthew 14:34) (
Γενησαρετ Rec. in
Mark 6:58; cf.
Tdf. edition 2 Proleg., p. xxxv., edition 7 Proleg., p. liv. note{3}) (Targums
גֲּנֵיסַר or
גִּנּוסַר (according to Delitzsch (Römerbr. in d. Hebrew übers., p. 27)
גִּנֵּיסַר,
גִּנּוּסַר;
Γεννησαρ, 1 Macc. 11:67;
Josephus,
b. j. 2, 20, 6 etc.;
Genesara, Pliny, 5, 15),
Gennesaret, a very lovely and fertile region on the Sea of Galilee (
Josephus,
b. j. 3, 10, 7):
ἡ γῆ Γεννησαρέτ Matthew 14:34;
Mark 6:53;
ἡ λίμνη Γεννησαρέτ Luke 5:1, anciently
כִּנֶּרֶת יָם,
Numbers 34:11, or
כִּנֲּרות יָם,
Joshua 12:3, from the city
כִּנֶּרֶת,
Deuteronomy 3:17, which was near by; called in the Gospels
ἡ θάλασσα τῆς Γαλιλαίας,
Mark 1:16;
Matthew 4:18;
ἡ θάλασσα τῆς Τιβεριάδος,
John 6:1;
John 21:1. The lake, according to
Josephus,
b. j. 3, 10, 7, is 140 stadia long and 40 wide; (its extreme dimensions now are said to average 12 1/4 miles by 6 3/4 miles, and its level to be nearly 700 feet below that of the Mediterranean). Cf. Rüetschi in
Herzog v., p. 6f; Furrer in
Schenkel ii., p. 322ff; (Wilson in
The Recovery of Jerusalem, Part ii.; Robinson, Phys. Geog. of the Holy Land, p. 199ff;
BB. DD. For conjectures respecting the derivation of the word cf. Alex.'s Kitto under the end; Merrill, Galilee in the Time of Christ, § vii.).