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・ Harassment Restraining Order
・ Harassment, alarm or distress
・ Harasta
・ Haraszti
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・ Harat 'Awali
・ Harat Bar, Chaboksar
・ Haramizu Station
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Haran (biblical place)
・ Haran (disambiguation)
・ Haran Gawaita
・ Haran's diamond theorem
・ Haran, Azerbaijan
・ Haran, Iran
・ Haran, Kohistan
・ Harana
・ Harana Halli
・ Harana/Valle de Arana
・ Haranabush
・ Haranak
・ Haranampur
・ Haranath
・ Haranath (actor)


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Haran (biblical place) : ウィキペディア英語版
Haran (biblical place)

Haran, Charan, or Charran (Hebrew: (unicode:חָרָן), transliterated as ''Ḫaran'') is a place mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. Haran is almost universally identified with Harran, an Assyrian name of the Hurrian city whose ruins lie within present-day Turkey. Haran first appears in the Book of Genesis as the home of Terah and the latter's descendants, and as Abraham's temporary home. Later biblical passages list Haran among some cities and lands subjugated by Assyrian rulers and among Tyre's trading partners.
==Chronology==
Haran was a place where Terah temporarily settled with his son, the Patriarch Abraham, who was known as Abram at that time, his nephew Lot, and Abram's wife Sarai, all of them descendants of Arpachshad son of Shem, during their journey from Ur Kaśdim (''Ur of the Chaldees'') to the Land of Canaan. The region of this Haran is referred to variously as ''Paddan Aram'' and ''Aram Naharaim''. Abram lived there until he was 75 years old before continuing his journey. Although Abram's nephew Lot accompanied him to Canaan, other descendants of Terah remained in Paddan-Aram, where Abraham's grandson Jacob sought his parents' relatives, namely Laban, for whom he worked for twenty years in Haran.
In 2 Kings (19:12) and Isaiah (37:12) Haran reappears in the late 8th to early 7th century BC context of the Neo-Assyrian Empire's conquests. It appears again in the Book of Ezekiel (27:23) (6th century BC) as a former trading partner of the Phoenician city Tyre. In the New Testament, Haran is mentioned in the Book of Acts (7:2–4), in a recounting of the story in Genesis wherein it first appears.
In Genesis 28:10-19, Jacob, Abraham's grandson, left Beersheba, and went toward Haran where he had his dream of Jacob's Ladder. Afterwards, Jacob names that place Beth-el.

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