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Displaying: agr - hag

  • Agrippa (A-Z entry)

    Herod Agrippa I , grandson of Herod the Great ; the name ‘Agrippa’ was assumed on account of a friendship with Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Ahaz (A-Z entry)

    King of Judah , 735 – 715 BCE . The Assyrians were dominant, and Syria and Ephraim resolved to arrest their eastward expansion and ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • ambassadors (A-Z entry)

    ‘Servants’ (AV, NRSV), ‘envoys’ (REB), ‘an embassy’ (NJB) sent on a goodwill visit to another country ( 1 Kgs. 5: 1 ) or to ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Artaxerxes (A-Z entry)

    In Ezra 4: 7 etc. the reference is probably to Artaxerxes I , king of Persia 465 – 424 BCE , whose appointment of ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • The Assyrian Empire (Chapters)

    Much of our knowledge of the Assyrians comes from records they left behind, in particular through royal annals. In using these records, it is ...

    Source: Oxford Bible Atlas

  • Babylonian exile (A-Z entry)

    the forced relocation of some of the population of Judah, perhaps the ruling portion of it, after the conquest by Babylonia in 597–586 ...

    Source: Oxford Biblical Studies Online

  • Benhadad (A-Z entry)

    The name of several kings of Damascus , among them one who made war in Israel during the reign of Ahab , who defeated ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Caesar (A-Z entry)

    Originally the name of a Roman aristocratic family and assumed by Augustus as the adopted son of the dictator C. Julius Caesar , and ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • 1 Chronicles (Chapters)

    The Chronicler's Work As the introduction to this book notes ( OT, p. 435 ), the first book of Chronicles is part of a ...

    Source: The Catholic Study Bible

  • citizenship (A-Z entry)

    Roman citizenship was immensely important in the NT era, and Paul was able to claim it—and more; he was also a citizen of Tarsus ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Domitian (A-Z entry)

    Emperor from 81 to 96 CE (when he was assassinated). Under him the Romans made substantial military advances in Britain. He pressed his claim ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Edomites (A-Z entry)

    Inhabitants of land at the SE end of the Dead Sea . The Edomites lived adjacent to the Israelites, with whom there were frequent ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Euphrates (A-Z entry)

    One of four rivers mentioned in Gen. 2: 14 which seems to have acted as the northernmost boundary of Israelite territory under David ( ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Euphrates (A-Z entry)

    The southernmost of the two rivers that, along with the Tigris, define Mesopotamia . The Euphrates begins from two tributaries in mountainous eastern Turkey, ...

    Source: The Oxford Companion to the Bible

  • Euphrates (A-Z entry)

    In Sumerian the name of the Euphrates River is BURANUN ; in Akkadian, ÍD.KIB.NUN.KI (lit., “Sippar River”); in Assyro-Babylonian, Purattu ; in Old Persian, ...

    Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East

  • Gedaliah (A-Z entry)

    The governor of Judah appointed by Nebuchadnezzar after its capture in 586 BCE ( 2 Kgs. 25: 22 ). He enjoyed the support of ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Gibeon (A-Z entry)

    A town NW of Jerusalem whose inhabitants tricked the invading Israelites into a treaty ( Josh. 9: 4 ), though later Saul attacked them ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Gibeon (A-Z entry)

    A site of some importance in the Bible, located approximately 9 km (5 mi) north of Jerusalem (35°11′ N, 31°51′ E; map reference 167.6 ...

    Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East

  • The Gihon Spring (Image) This result contains an image

    The Gihon Spring which flows into Hezekiah's Tunnel.

    Source: Oxford Bible Atlas

  • Haggadah of Pesaḥ (A-Z entry)

    (“telling of Passover”) the liturgical recitation used at the Passover Seder ; also the book that contains the recitation and instructions of the ...

    Source: Oxford Biblical Studies Online

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