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Shittah Tree; Shittim Wood

1 source
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia by James Orr (ed.) (1915)

shit´a, (שׁטּה, shiṭṭāh; Septuagint ξύλον ἄσηπτον, xúlon ásēpton; the Revised Version (British and American) ACACIA TREE (Isa 41:19)); (שׁטּים עצי, ‛ăcē shiṭṭı̄m; the Revised Version (British and American) ACACIA WOOD (Exo 25:5, Exo 25:10, Exo 25:13; Exo 26:15, Exo 26:26; Exo 27:1, Exo 27:6; Deu 10:3)): The word was originally shinṭah, derived from the Arabic sanṭ, now a name confined to one species of acacia, Acacia nilotica (Natural Order, Leguminosae), but possibly was once a more inclusive term. The Acacia nilotica is at present confined to the Sinaitic peninsula and to Egypt. Closely allied species, the Acacia tortilis and Acacia seyal, both classed together under the Arabic name sayyāl, are plentiful in the valleys about the Dead Sea from Engedi southward. Those who have ridden from ‛Ain Jidy to Jebel Usdum will never forget these most striking features of the landscape. They are most picturesque trees with their gnarled trunks, sometimes 2 ft. thick, their twisted, thorny branches, which often give the whole tree an umbrella-like form, and their fine bipinnate leaves with minute leaflets. The curiously twisted pods and the masses of gum arabic which exude in many parts are also peculiar features. The trees yield a valuable, hard, close-grained timber, not readily attacked by insects.

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