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English Dictionary: Cush by the DICT Development Group
2 results for Cush
From Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary [easton]:
   Cush
      black. (1.) A son, probably the eldest, of Ham, and the father
      of Nimrod (Gen. 10:8; 1 Chr. 1:10). From him the land of Cush
      seems to have derived its name. The question of the precise
      locality of the land of Cush has given rise to not a little
      controversy. The second river of Paradise surrounded the whole
      land of Cush (Gen. 2:13, R.V.). The term Cush is in the Old
      Testament generally applied to the countries south of the
      Israelites. It was the southern limit of Egypt (Ezek. 29:10,
      A.V. "Ethiopia," Heb. Cush), with which it is generally
      associated (Ps. 68:31; Isa. 18:1; Jer. 46:9, etc.). It stands
      also associated with Elam (Isa. 11:11), with Persia (Ezek.
      38:5), and with the Sabeans (Isa. 45:14). From these facts it
      has been inferred that Cush included Arabia and the country on
      the west coast of the Red Sea. Rawlinson takes it to be the
      country still known as Khuzi-stan, on the east side of the Lower
      Tigris. But there are intimations which warrant the conclusion
      that there was also a Cush in Africa, the Ethiopia (so called by
      the Greeks) of Africa. Ezekiel speaks (29:10; comp. 30:4-6) of
      it as lying south of Egypt. It was the country now known to us
      as Nubia and Abyssinia (Isa. 18:1; Zeph. 3:10, Heb. Cush). In
      ancient Egyptian inscriptions Ethiopia is termed _Kesh_. The
      Cushites appear to have spread along extensive tracts,
      stretching from the Upper Nile to the Euphrates and Tigris. At
      an early period there was a stream of migration of Cushites
      "from Ethiopia, properly so called, through Arabia, Babylonia,
      and Persia, to Western India." The Hamite races, soon after
      their arrival in Africa, began to spread north, east, and west.
      Three branches of the Cushite or Ethiopian stock, moving from
      Western Asia, settled in the regions contiguous to the Persian
      Gulf. One branch, called the Cossaeans, settled in the
      mountainous district on the east of the Tigris, known afterwards
      as Susiana; another occupied the lower regions of the Euphrates
      and the Tigris; while a third colonized the southern shores and
      islands of the gulf, whence they afterwards emigrated to the
      Mediterranean and settled on the coast of Palestine as the
      Phoenicians. Nimrod was a great Cushite chief. He conquered the
      Accadians, a Tauranian race, already settled in Mesopotamia, and
      founded his kingdom, the Cushites mingling with the Accads, and
      so forming the Chaldean nation.
     
         (2.) A Benjamite of this name is mentioned in the title of Ps.
      7. "Cush was probably a follower of Saul, the head of his tribe,
      and had sought the friendship of David for the purpose of
      'rewarding evil to him that was at peace with him.'"
     

From Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's) [hitchcock]:
   Cush, Cushan, Cushi, Ethiopians; blackness
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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