4. Beyond the three confederates of Abram and these two kings, no individual Amorites appear in history (unless Araunah or Ornan the Jebusite be one)
5. There are no traces of any peculiar government, worship, or customs, different from those of the other “nations of Canaan.” SEE CANAANITE. All mountaineers are warlike; and, from the three confederate brothers who at a moment's notice accompanied “Abram the Hebrew” in his pursuit of the five kings, down to those who, not depressed by the slaughter inflicted by Joshua and the terror of the name of Israel, persisted in driving the children of Dan into the mountain, the Amorites fully maintained this character. From the language of Amo_2:9 it has been inferred that the Amorites in general were men of extraordinary stature, but perhaps the allusion is to an individual, Og, king of Bashan, who is described by Moses as being the last “of the remnant of the giants.” His bedstead was of iron, “nine cubits in length and four cubits in breadth” (Deu_3:21). One word of the “Amorite” language has survived — the name Senir (not “Shenir”) for Mount Hermon (Deu_3:9); but may not this be the Canaanitish name as opposed to the Phoenician (Sirion) on the one side and the Hebrew on the other? SEE HERMON.