ZIDDIM.See Zer.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909
A fortified town of Naphtali (Jos_19:35). Jerus. Talmud identifies it with Kerr Chittai; probably Hattin at the N. foot of Kurn Hattin, "horns of Hattin," a few miles W. of Tiberias.
Fausset's Bible Dictionary
By Andrew Robert Fausset, co-Author of Jamieson, Fausset and Brown's 1888.
Zid'dim. (the declivities). A fortified town in the allotment of Naphtali. Jos_10:35.
Smith's Bible Dictionary
By Dr. William Smith.Published in 1863
zid?im (הצּדּים, ha-ciddı̄m; Codex Vaticanus τῶν Τυρίων, tṓn Turı́ōn; Codex Alexandrinus omits): A fortified city in Naphtali (Jos_19:35), probably represented by the modern Ḥaṭṭı̄n, about 5 miles Northwest of Tiberias, in the opening of the gorge that breaks down seaward North of Ḳurūn Ḥaṭṭı̄n, the traditional Mount of Beatitudes.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.
(Heb. with the art. hats-Tsiddinm', הִצַּדַּים, the declivities; Sept. τῶν Τυρίων [apparently reading ד for ד]; Vittig, Assedim), the first named of the fortified towns of the tribe of Naplitali (Jos_19:35), Zer being mentioned next; but the two names are probably to be connected as one. SEE ZER. The Sept. (as above) identifies the place with Tyre and the Syriac with Zidon, but both these are quite beyond the bounds of Naphtali. The Jerusalem Talmud (Megillah, ch. 1) is probably nearer, the mark in identifying hats-Tsiddim with Kefr Chittai, whicil Schwarz (Palest. p. 182) with much probability takes to be the present Hattin, at the northern foot of the well-known Kurn Hacttin, or Horns of Hattin, a few miles west of Tiberias. This identification falls in with the fact that the next names in the list are all known to have been connected with the lake. The village has several traces of antiquity in its tombs, and is, compared with many others, a clean and thriving place (Tristram, Bible Places, p. 258).
CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.