Rujm
Rujm
Arabic place name
Rujm (Arabic: رجم, rûjm; p. rûjûm) is an Arabic word that appears as an element in numerous place names. It can be translated as 'mound, cairn, hill, spur', and also as 'stone heap' or 'tumulus'.[1][2] The following is a list of place names that include Rujm as an element:
- Kanân Rujm Kûddâh, "the peaks of the cairn of the potter", or of "the flint stone for striking fir"[3]
- Khirbat er Rujm, "the ruin of the stone heap"[4]
- Rujm Abu Ḥashabe[5]
- Rujm Abu Helal, "the cairn of Abu Helal"[6]
- Rujm Abu Meheir (Rujm Abu Muheir), "the cairn of Abu Meheir"[6][7]
- Rujm Abu Shuweikeh, "the cairn of the thistles"[6]
- Rujm Abu Zumeiter, "the cairn of Abu Zumeiter"[6]
- Rujm Afâneh, "the cairn of rottenness"[6]
- Rujm el 'Ajamy, "the cairn of the Persian"[6]
- Rujm 'Alei, "the cairn of the high place"[6]
- Rujm 'Atîyeh, "the cairn of 'Atiyeh"[6]
- Rujm el 'Azâzimeh, "the cairn of the Azazimeh Arabs"[6]
- Rujm el Bahr, "the cairn of the sea";[6] a site by the name is on the Dead Sea shore near Jericho
- Rujm el Bakarah "the cairn of the cow"[6]
- Rujm el Bârish, "the cairn of the ground covered with variegated herbiage"[6]
- Rujm Bâruk, "the cairn of Baruk"[6]
- Rujm Beni Yasser, "rujm of the sons of Yasser" (a fortlet of Nabataean origin)[8][9]
- Rujm Birjis (on the Kerak plateau)[10]
- Rujm ed Debbâbeh, "the cairn of the moveable hut"[6]
- Rujm ed Deir, "the cairn of the monastery"[6]
- Rujm ed Derbi, "the cairn of the roadster"[6]
- Rujm edh Dhib, "the cairn of the wolf"[6]
- Rujm ed Dîr[11]
- Rujm ed Dûribeh, "the cairn of the little road"[6]
- Rujm el Fahjeh, "the cairn of el Fahjeh"[6]
- Rujm el-Farideyyeh[12]
- Rujm Heleiseh, "the cairn of the verdure"[6]
- Rujm Handhal, "the cairn of colocynth"[6]
- Rujm el Heik, "the cairn of the spindle"[6]
- Rujm el-Hamiri, (southeast of Hebron)[13]
- Rujm al-Henu, (Jordan)[14]
- Rujm el Heri, (southeast of Madaba)[15]
- Rujm el-Hiri, "the stone heap of the wild cat"[2]
- Rujm el Humeitah, "the cairn of the mountain fig"[6]
- Rujm el Hummûs, "the cairn of the chick-pea"[6]
- Rujm el Humra, "the red cairn"[6]
- Rujm Ibn Basma, "the cairn of Ibn Basma"[6]
- Rujm Jemảh, "the cairn of the gathering"[16]
- Rujm Jîz, "the cairn on the valley side"[6]
- Rujm Jureideh, "the cairn of the troop"[6]
- Rujm el Kahakîr, "the cairn of the stone heaps"[6]
- Rujm el Kandôl, "the cairn of the thorn tree"[6]
- Rujm el-Khadar[17]
- Rujm el Kherâzmîyeh, "the cairn of the Kharezinians"[6]
- Rujm el Khiâri, "the cairn of the cucumber"[6]
- Rujm el Kurrât, "the stone of the attacks"[6]
- Rujm Kuteit, "the cairn of the cat" or "the cairn of the crag"[6]
- Rujm el Lukâr, "the cairn of Lukâr"[6]
- Rujm Al-Malfouf, "circular towers"[18]
- Rujm (el Mehawâfet) el Kibliyyeh, "the southern cairn (of the boundary)"[6]
- Rujm (el Mehawâfet) esh Shemaliyyeh, "the northern cairn (of the boundary)"[6]
- Rujm el-Merih, (a Nabataean or Late Roman era watchtower located 6 kilometers (3.7 mi) south of Lajjun)[19]
- Rujm el-Meshreferh (in Jordan, associated with Mizpah)[20]
- Rujm el Mogheifir, "the cairn of the pardoned"[6]
- Rujm el Mutukh, "the cairn of the debris"[6]
- Rujm en Nâkeh, (Rujm en-Naqa) "the cairn of the she-camel"[6][21]
- Rujm en Niâs, "the cairn of en Niyâs[6]
- Rujm en Nûeita, "the cairn of the sailors"[6]
- Rujm en Nūkb, "the cairn of the pass"[6]
- Rujm er Refeif, "the glittering cairn"[6]
- Rujm Reheif, "the sharp-pointed cairn"[6]
- Rujm Reiya, "the cairn of quenching thirst", or "the cairn of sweet fragrance"[6]
- Rujm es S'â, "the cairn of the tax-gatherers"[6]
- Rujm es Sâîgh (Rujm as-Sayigh), "the cairn of the goldsmith"[6][22]
- Rujm es-Sebit[23]
- Rujm ash Shami
- Rujm ash Shara'irah
- Rujm esh Sheikh Suleimân, "the cairn of Sheikh Suleimân"[6]
- Rujm Shummer, "the cairn of wild fennel"[6]
- Rujm es Sûeif, "the cairn of the little sword"[6]
- Rujm at Tarûd, "the cairn of the projection", or "the cairn of the prominent peak"[6]
- Rujm Umm el 'Arâis, "the cairn of the mother of brides"[6]
- Rujm Umm Kheir, "the cairn of Umm Kheir"[6]
- Rujm Umm es Sata, "the cairn of the mother of the assault"[6]
- Rujm el Waîr, "the cairn of rugged rocks"[6]
- Rujm el Yaklûm, "the cairn of Yaklûm"[6]
- Rujm az-Zuwaira (in Zuwaira al-Fauqa, or Upper Zohar)[24]
- Rŭjûm el Behîmeh, "the cairns of the beast"[16]
- Rujûm Umm Kharrûbeh, "the cairns by the locust tree" (Ceratonia siliqua)[16] (or, "the cairns of the mother of the carob tree")