remaining; hand of a prince
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary
SARID.A border town of Zebulun (Jos_19:10; Jos_19:12) Probably Sarid is a copyists error for Sadid, which may be identified with Tell Shadûd, to the N. of the plain of Esdraelon.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909
A landmark on Zebulun's boundary (Jos_19:10; Jos_19:12). ("hole"), "incision" (Knobel); perhaps the southern opening of the deep, narrow wady, coming down from the basin of Nazareth, about an hour to the S.E. of Nazareth, between two steep mountains. (See tseen, in Keil).
Fausset's Bible Dictionary
By Andrew Robert Fausset, co-Author of Jamieson, Fausset and Brown's 1888.
Sa'rid. (survivor). A chief landmark of the territory of Zebulun. Jos_19:10; Jos_19:12. All that can be gathered of its position is that it lay to the west of Chislothtabor.
Smith's Bible Dictionary
By Dr. William Smith.Published in 1863
sā?rid (שׂריד, sārı̄dh; Codex Vaticanus Ἐσεδεκγωλά, Esedekgōlá, Σεδδούκ, Seddoúk; Codex Alexandrinus Σαρθίδ, Sarthı́d, Σαρίδ, Sarı́d): A place on the southern border of Zebulun to the West of Chisloth-tabor (Jos_19:10, Jos_19:12). It is mentioned but not identified in Eusebius, Onomasticon. Probably we should read ?Sadid,? and in that case may with Conder locate it at Tell Shaddū, an artificial mound with some modern ruins and good springs, _ which stands on the plain, about 5 miles West of Iksāl.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.
Sarid
(Heb. Surid' שָׂרַיד. survivor, as often [Fürst, place of refuge]; Sept. Σαρίδ v.r. Σαρδίδ, Σεδδούχ, etc.), the point of departure on the southern boundary of Zebulon, lying west of Chisloth Tabor, and south of Daberath and Japhia (Jos_19:10; Jos_19:12). It was unknown to Eusebius and Jerome (Onomast. s.v. Sarith), and the name has not been discovered by modern research. Knobel, holding the word to mean an incision, thinks it designates merely the southern opening of the deep and narrow wady which comes down from the basin of Nazareth (q.v.), between two steep mountains (Seetzen, 2, 151 sq.; Robinson, 3, 183). Keil more definitely suggests that it may be found in one of the two heaps of ruins on the south side of the modern Mount of Precipitation, namely those near el-Mezrach, on the northwest. SEE TRIBE; SEE ZEBULON.
CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.