Ænon


Ænon, more commonly written Aenon, is the site mentioned by the Gospel of John as the place where John was baptising after his encounter with Jesus.
"Ænon" is the Greek rendition of the Semitic term for "spring" or "natural fountain", like the Hebrew and Arabic ayn. In the water-poor Middle East, places owning a spring tend to be named after that water source, so that toponyms consisting of or containing the construct state word "ein-" are common. The particular site mentioned in the Gospel of John is therefore closer identified as "Aenon near Salim". is the only place in the Bible where the name Aenon is found.
The name Aenon is commonly used amongst Baptist organizations and churches.

Identification attempts

Information from the Gospel

Both names, "Aenon" and "Salim", are not unique, and the Gospel text offers only two additional hints about where Aenon might be located: the most direct information is that "there was plenty of water there", and the second is that it was west of the River Jordan because at Aenon John's disciples talk of the site where John first encountered Jesus as being "on the other side of the Jordan" which is taken to mean east of the river. We also know from that that first encounter happened at "Bethany on the other side of the Jordan".

'Ainun in Wadi Fara

One possible location is near the upper source of the Wadi Far'a, an open valley extending from Mount Ebal to the Jordan River, which is full of springs. There is a place called 'Ainun four miles north of the springs.

Eusebius: Saloumias south of Scythopolis

Another possible location, which is by Eusebius' description in his Onomasticon, is at "a village in the valley, at the eighth milestone from Scythopolis,... called Salumias." This view was already supported by the 19th-century Smith's Bible Dictionary and the 1915 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia and is still favoured by some.

Madaba Map: east of the Jordan near Jericho

The 6th-century Madaba Map shows the location of Ænon right across the Jordan from Bethabara, near Jericho. Bethabara is in some, but not all, versions of the Gospel of John the place where John was baptising during his encounter with Jesus. The map and archaeological findings at the site indicate that at least during part of the Byzantine period, this was the site venerated as Aenon. The two relevant map inscriptions read
With the Dead Sea shown on the right side of the map giving context, Bethabara is on the west of the Jordan, while Ænon is on the east.