Chebar
From BibleEncyclopedia.Net
Length, a river in the “land of the Chaldeans” (Eze_1:3), on the banks of which were located some of the Jews of the Captivity (Eze_1:1; Eze_3:15, Eze_3:23; Eze_10:15, Eze_10:20, Eze_10:22). It has been supposed to be identical with the river Habor, the Chaboras, or modern Khabour, which falls into the Euphrates at Circesium. To the banks of this river some of the Israelites were removed by the Assyrians (2Ki_17:6). An opinion that has much to support it is that the “Chebar” was the royal canal of Nebuchadnezzar, the Nahr Malcha, the greatest in Mesopotamia, which connected the Tigris with the Euphrates, in the excavation of which the Jewish captives were probably employed.
kē´bar (כּבר, kebhār, “joining” (Young), “length” (Strong); Χοβάρ, Chobár):
The river by the side of which his first vision was vouchsafed to Ezekiel (Eze_1:1). It is described as in “the land of the Chaldeans,” and is not, therefore, to be sought in northern Mesopotamia. This rules out the Habor, the modern Chabour, with which it is often identified. The two names are radically distinct: חבור, ḥābhōr could not be derived from כּבר, kebhāř. One of the great Babylonian canals is doubtless intended. Hilprext found mention made of (nāru) kabaru, one of these canals large enough to be navigable, to the East of Nippur, “in the land of the Chaldeans.” This “great canal” he identifies with the rood. shaṭṭ en-Nīl, in which probably we should recognize the ancient Chebar.
