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asaph

n. An early Welsh bishop and saint

Wikipedia
Asaph

Asaph (Hebrew for "God has gathered") may refer to:

  • Asaph Hall, 19th century astronomer
  • Asaph Fipke, Canadian animator
  • Saint Asaph, first Bishop of the Diocese of Saint Asaph in Wales
  • Asaph ben Berekhyah (also known as Asaph ha-Rophe; Asaph ha-Yarhoni; Asaph ha-Yehuda Asaph Iudaeus), 6th-century Jewish physician, author of the Book of Assaf
  • The Diocese of Saint Asaph
  • St Asaph, a city in North Wales
  • Psalms of Asaph
  • Asaph (Bible), the name of several Biblical figures
Asaph (biblical figure)

Asaph is the name of three men from the Old Testament or Hebrew Bible. The articles related to the son of Berachiah and descendant of Kohath refer to the same person.

  • Asaph, the father of Joah
  • Asaph, son of Berachiah the Gershonite

Together with Heman, the grandson of the Israelite prophet Samuel (, or 1 Chronicles 6:39 in non-Hebrew translations), he and his male descendants were set aside by King David to worship God in song and music . He authored Psalms 50, and Psalms 73 to 83.

  • Asaph, a Levite descendant of Kohath
  • Asaph, the keeper of the king's forest under the Persian king Artaxerxes I Longimanus
Asaph (album)

Asaph is the second studio album from Loud Harp. They released the album on April 8, 2014.

Usage examples of "asaph".

Rupert was especially obsessed with an organization called the Asaph Hall Society, named for the self-taught scientist who discovered Phobos and Deimos.

Chairperson of the Data Bank Committee of the Asaph Hall Society, I can tell you everything you want to know about Phobos and Deimos.

When Asaph Hall went to name his discoveries, he logically evoked the two sons and companions of Ares, the Greek god of war.

Valerie, Bobby, and I are now honorary members of the Asaph Hall Society.

Kepler erred here, two moons did turn up in telescopic views of Mars more than two centuries later, when Asaph Hall at the U.

Fired by Victorian Mars enthusiasms, another American astronomer, Asaph Hall, set out with less poetic vision but a more mundane mind to search for moons around the Red Planet.

During the same golden age, when astronomy could still be done from observatories in cities, Asaph Hall sought Martian moons at the U.

There was Hugh, on his favourite self-willed grey, with his son on his saddle-bow, Aline, unruffled by the haste of her preparations for leaving town, on her white jennet, her maid and friend Constance pillion behind a groom, a second groom following with the pack-pony on a leading rein, and the two pilgrims to Saint Asaph merrily escorted by this family party.

But the real quantum leap in our knowledge had to wait until 1977, one hundred years exactly after Asaph Hall's discovery.