Carmel
Carmel in the Bible refers to two distinct places:
- Mount Carmel, coastal mountain range in Israel overlooking the Mediterranean Sea
- Carmel (biblical settlement), an ancient Israelite town in Judea
The word Carmel (Hebrew language: כַּרְמֶל) means "fresh" (planted), or "vineyard" (planted) and Karmiel (Hebrew: כַּרְמִיאֵל) is a portmanteau meaning "God's Vineyard".
The word is also commonly used in reference to the Carmelites and their houses or foundations.
In modern times, the name was also given to:
Places
- Mount Carmel (disambiguation), places named after Mount Carmel
- Carmel City, a Druze town
- Carmel, Canlubang, a sitio in the Philippines
- French Carmel, neighborhood in Haifa, Israel
- al-Karmil, a Palestinian village and modern-day successor to the Biblical Carmel
- Carmel, Har Hebron, an Israeli settlement in the West Bank, adjacent to the ancient site whose name it shares
- Carmel Market, a shuq in Tel Aviv, Israel
- Australia
- Carmel, Western Australia, suburb of Perth, Western Australia
- Spain
- El Carmel, district in the city of Barcelona, Catalonia
- United States
- Carmel Formation, a rock unit in Utah
- Carmel, Indiana, a city in Hamilton County
- Carmel, Maine, a town in Penobscot County
- Carmel, New York, a town in Putnam County
- Carmel, Ohio, an unincorporated community
- Carmel, West Virginia, an unincorporated community
- Carmel, Wisconsin, an unincorporated community in Waupaca County
- Carmel Hamlet, New York
- Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, or "Carmel", a city in Monterey County
- Carmel River, a river in Monterey County, California
- Carmel Highlands, California, a small, unincorporated town located in Monterey County
- Carmel Valley (disambiguation), a geographic region and American Viticultural Area
- Carmel Valley Village, California, another small, unincorporated town in Monterey County
- Carmel Valley, San Diego, California, a neighborhood of the city of San Diego
- Carmel, a neighborhood in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
- Wales
People
- John Carmel Heenan (1905–1975), priest in the Roman Catholic Church in the United Kingdom
- Roger C. Carmel (1932–1986), American character actor
- Carmel (singer), female singer of the eponymous British band Carmel
- Carmel Myers (1899–1980), American actress
- Carmel Bakurski (born 1976), Australian field hockey defender
- Carmit Bachar (born 1974), American singer, a previous member of The Pussycat Dolls
Other
- Carmel is the term used to refer to a monastery of the monks and convent of the nuns of the Carmelite religious order
- Carmel School (disambiguation), various schools and colleges
- Carmel & District Cricket Club North Wales village cricket team
- Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo (Carmel Mission), a Spanish mission located in Monterey County, California
- Carmel and Carmeleno, other names for the Rumsen language and people, California
- Autocars Co., or Carmel automobile, fiberglass-shelled cars used in Israel during the 1960s and 70s
- Carmel daisy, flowering plant of the family Dipsacales
- Carmel Formation, a Middle Jurassic rock unit in the southwestern United States
- Carmel Winery, a vineyard and winery based in Israel, well known for producing and marketing kosher wine
- i840 'Carmel', a 1999 chipset for dual Pentium 3 and Pentium 3 Xeon processors
- Carmel, Carmarthenshire, a terrestrial broadcast transmission station in Carmarthenshire, Wales
- Carmel Ventures, an Israeli venture capital firm
- Carmel (film), a 2011 film starring Josh Hutcherson and Hayden Panettiere
- Carmel Agrexco, Israel's largest exporter of agricultural produce
- Carmel (company), the international car and limousine service established in 1978
- KARMEL, a mnemonic for causes of high anion gap metabolic acidosis
See also
- Caramel
- Carmen (a unisex given name, its first root is a diminutive nickname for Carmel)
- Names similar to, for example, Carmel are Carmen, Karmel, Karmen and Armen.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.