docfiles.Helon Maven / Gradle / Ivy
Helon is a surname, the name of an ancient Scythian culture,[1] a language, a Christian, geographical and botanical name of biblical,[2] Hebrew[3] and Greek origin.Pronounced /'hɛə'loɴ/ and phonetically spelt khay-lone', the name is derived from the Hebrew: He, Lamed, Nun Sofit.Transliterated as: Chelon, Chêlôn, Khay-lone',[4]האֵלן ,הלן, or האֵלנ in Hebrew; Gehlen, Gelen, Gelin, or Гелен in Russian; Gelon, or Гелон in Ukrainian; Gelon, or Γέλων in Greek; Helan in Czech; Helon in English and Latin. Common spelling in the Polish language (since the 15th century)[5] is Helon, but the name can also be rendered as Chelon; the ‘C’ being silent.Spelling of the name Helon is often confused with and rendered Helen, Helin, or Elon.The progenitor of the name was Helon, the second son of Zebulon ben (of) Jacob, Prince of the Tribe of Zebulon.In keeping with the seafaring occupation and inherent traditions of the Tribe of Zebulon,[6] the name Helon, its usages and derivatives are synonymous with traits indicative of water.The earliest known written references to the name Helon as rendered in its current and correct Latin form are contained in various Latin Codexes, including the Codex Gigas (the Great Book, or Devil's Bible); the world's largest and most complete bible manuscript which predates the King James Bible by approximately 300 years and the Gutenberg Bible by approximately 150 years.Since publication of the King James Bible of 1611, the name Helon as it appears in historical and contemporary bibles, concordances and biblical commentaries has been perpetually corrupted and rendered as Elon (phonetically spelt ay-lone').Elon (sometimes Elom, as referenced in the Gutenberg Bible, or Helom)[7] was the name of the Hittite father of Basemath (who was also called Adah), the second wife of Esau ben Isaac.[8]Dr James Strong (1890) who based his Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible on the King James (KJV) rendering, defined Elon (transliterated as ay-lone', ay-lone', ay-lone', or אֵילוֹן in Hebrew) as an oak-grove, terebinth, or mighty - derived from the Hebrew 'ayil, or איל; strength, an oak, strong tree, or anything strong - meanings which are inconsistent with the characteristic traits of the seafaring occupation of the Tribe of Zebulon which are indicative of water.Elsewhere unknown as a Zebulonite name by definition, the misnomer Elon has continually been applied erroneously by subsequent biblical and theologian commentators and included as a matter of course into those bibles published post 1611; where in its place should be the correct rendering Helon.According to McNair (2012):In his treatise The Wisdom of the Hebrew Alphabet, Rabbi Munk[10] imparts the sacred Kabbalistic meanings of the letters of the Hebrew Aleph-Beis as embraced in the name הלן (Helon):Said Rabbi Munk of the missing letter ה (He), the symbol of divinity, gentility and specificity:[14]According to the Talmudist Rabbi Louis Ginzberg (1873-1953):In the Polish language, it means ‘żołw’,[18] a turtle of the order Chelonians.[19]The British Methodist Theologian and Commentator Dr Adam Clark (circa 1760-1832) verbalized during his sermon “The Doctrine of Endless Misery not Taught in the Bible” that:Cyrus Alvin Potts (1922) defined Helon:Past Worshipful Master and Masonic historian Harry Mendoza (1989) designated Helon to mean:George K. Barr (1990) citing Numbers 1:9 and 2:7 delineates Helon to mean:The first century Romano-Jewish historian Josephus wrote:Helon was the second son of Zebulon, ben (or son of) Jacob: Genesis 46:14 and Numbers 26:26. Also a Prince, and the father of Eliab who assisted Moses and Aaron in numbering the children of Israel in the wilderness of Sinai (circa 1461 B.C.):[25] Numbers 1:9, 2:7, 7:24-29, 10:16.Helon ben akhar ben (a direct descendant of) Zebulon judged Israel for 10 years (circa 1083-1073 B.C.)[26] during the lawless period of Israel's history between the invasion of Canaan and the establishment of the monarchy:[27] Judges 12:11-12.[28]Kettel (1847),[29] Willson (1860),[30] Willis (1867)[31] and Davis (1903)[32] have proposed that Helon was the name of the leper cleansed in Capernaum by Jesus as narrated by the Evangelists Matthew 8:1-4, Mark 1:40-45 and Luke 5:12-16.Bradley (1908)[33] wrote of a Rabbi Helon who was the procurer of the ass that Jesus rode during his triumphal entry into Jerusalem.In his book Helon's Pilgrimage to Jerusalem: A Picture of Judaism in the Century which Preceded the Advent of Our Saviour (1824), the German novelist and Judaic writer Gerhard 'Friedrich' Abraham Strauss (1786-1863) wrote:Kettel (1847) describes Helon as a Rabbi of high birth and a Member of the Sanhedrin who was present at the questioning of a man who calls himself Christ.[47] Helon became a leper.[48] He had a wife named Sarai (p. 251), a son Benaiah the younger (p. 349) and a daughter Miriam (pp. 353–354).In an allegory penned in 1863, the author I.E.P. alludes to the leper Helon, then resident in a pleasant village in one of the western counties of England,[49] as being a captive and wandering jew.English novelist and Judaic writer Grace Aguilar wrote in her short composition Helon: A Fragment of Jewish History (1902)[50] describing Helon as a Jewish minstrel living near the Rhine river at the start of Spring, close to the end of the eleventh century.In Jesus of Nazareth: A Life (Bradley, 1908), Helon is described as:In the chapter Mary and Helon,[54] Helon is characterised as:Helon is also the name of a Ukrainian beer brewed in Poltava by the PAT Firm Poltavpivo (ПАТ Фірма Полтавпиво). The Helon branded beer features, most significantly, a golden Scythian stag couchant which is consistent with the assertion of the American professor of history, political science, and Chair of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Toronto Paul Magocsi,[56] et al.[57][58] that Helons were Scythians:Vasyl Yakovych Schevchuk, Doctor of Economic Sciences, Professor, President of the International Dnipro (Black Sea) Fund, and Minister of the Environment and Natural Resources of Ukraine (et al.) wrote in 2005 that:The Gelonians (or Geloni), also known as Helonians (or Heloni), whom could plausibly be the (Lat.) Helonitarum (Helonites) of Numbers 26:26, are mentioned as a nation in northwestern Scythia by Herodotus who stated that:According to Schevchuk, et al.:The timber-walled Scythian city of Helon is currently being reconstructed at (Більське городище) Belskoye (Belsk/Bil'sk), Kotelva district, Poltava, Ukraine (latitude 50° 05´N X longitude 34°38´E).Helon is also the name of a town in Bhamo District, Momauk, Kachin State, Burma (latitude 24° 20' 0"N X longitude 97° 17' 0"E.) at altitude 102 metres (337 feet) above sea level.In keeping with traits indicative of water, the name Helon has been used as the derivation of some botanical genera including the hardy perennial Helonias bullata Linnaeus (the Swamp Pink Lily, or Bog Candle), of the Liliaceae family, and the perennial Heloniopsis Orientalis (the Oriental Swamp Pink Lily herb) of the family Liliaceae-Melanthiaceae.Surname:Christian Name:
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