<P> All Old and New Testament writers use the term "sea" (Hebrew יָם yam, Greek θάλασσα), with the exception of Luke who calls it "the Lake of Gennesaret" (Luke 5: 1), from the Greek λίμνη Γεννησαρέτ (limnē Gennēsaret), the "Grecized form of Chinnereth" according to Easton (1897). </P> <P> The Babylonian Talmud, as well as Flavius Josephus mention the sea by the name "Sea of Ginosar" after the small fertile plain of Ginosar that lies on its western side . Ginosar is yet another name derived from "Kinneret". </P> <P> In the New Testament, the term "sea of Galilee" (Greek: θάλασσαν τῆς Γαλιλαίας, thalassan tēs Galilaias) is used in the gospel of Matthew 4: 18; 15: 29, the gospel of Mark 1: 16; 7: 31, and in the gospel of John 6: 1 as "the sea of Galilee, which is the sea of Tiberias" (θαλάσσης τῆς Γαλιλαίας τῆς Τιβεριάδος, thalassēs tēs Galilaias tēs Tiberiados), the late 1st century CE name . Sea of Tiberias is also the name mentioned in Roman texts and in the Jerusalem Talmud, and was adopted into Arabic as Buhairet Tabariyya (help info) (بحيرة طبريا), "Lake Tiberias". </P> <P> From the Umayyad through the Mamluk period the lake was known in Arabic as "Bahr al - Minya", the "Sea of Minya", after the Umayyad qasr complex whose ruins are still visible at Khirbat al - Minya . This is the name employed by the medieval Persian and Arab scholars Al - Baladhuri, Al - Tabari and Ibn Kathir . </P>

What is the sea of galilee in the bible
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