Adami-nekeb
Adami-nekeb according to the Revised Version, or Adami-hannekeb, is a place mentioned in the Hebrew Bible's Book of Joshua, as a passage on the frontier of Naphtali. It is mentioned only in.
The Vulgate gives Adami quae est Neceb, "Adami, which is Neceb," while the Authorized [King James Version|King James Version] translates as two separate names, "Adami" and "Nekeb", as does the Septuagint: ΑΡΜΕ ΚΑΙ ΝΕΒΩΚ, or ΑΡΜΑΙ ΚΑΙ ΝΕΚΕΒ. The Jerusalem Talmud also divides the expression, Adami being represented as Damin, and Hannekeb as Caidatah.
Adolf Neubauer and George [Adam Smith] identify Adami with Damieh, 5 miles west of Tiberias, the site proposed by the Palestine Exploration Survey for the 'fenced city' Adamah of Joshua 19:36.
This, notes T. K. Cheyne, seems too far south considering that the 'tree of Bezaanim' was close to Kedesh, while Jabneel appears to have been a north Galilean fortress. These are the two localities between which Adami-nekeb is mentioned in Joshua 19:33. It is probable that the name Nkbu in the History of the [Karnak Temple complex|Karnak] list of Thutmose III means the pass Adami.