Bdellium
BDELLIUM, del´i-Um (Hebr. bedholaḥ): One
of the products of the land of Havilah, mentioned
with gold and the shoham-stone (E. V. "onyx")
in Gen. ii, 11–12. In Num. xi, 7, manna is said
to have resembled it. It was, therefore, something well known to the Hebrews, but the
exact meaning is uncertain. Some have thought
that it was a precious stone, perhaps the pearl;
others identify it with myrrh or with musk. The
most probable and generally accepted explanation
is that it was the gum of a tree, much prized in
antiquity and used in religious ceremonies. Pliny
(Hist. nat., xii, 35) describes it as transparent,
waxy, fragrant, oily to the touch, and bitter; the
tree was black, of the size of the olive; with leaves
like the ilex, and fruit like the wild fig; he designates Bactria as its home, but states that it grew
also in Arabia, India, Media, and Babylonia. It
probably belonged to the balsamodendra and was
allied to the myrrh.
I. Benzinger.