Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The Babylonian captivity would end when the "70 years" ended.
The story of the Babylonian captivity is a long and complicated one, with many figures involved.
The period has been called the "Babylonian captivity" of the popes.
This part of the genealogy falls in the period after the Babylonian captivity.
The subject given that year was the Babylonian Captivity.
The third stanza tells of the end of the Babylonian captivity.
The story begins with a family that leaves Jerusalem, just before the Babylonian captivity.
We will not place ourselves in the Babylonian Captivity of the Council.
It was a part of the Babylonian Captivity.
Same stories of Ezekiel in the Babylonian captivity are then narrated.
The people of the once-glorious city were forced into an exile known as "the Babylonian Captivity. "
The national resolve toward monotheism solidified during the experience of the Babylonian Captivity.
Scholars note that synagogues did not exist in their modern form before the destruction of the temple and the Babylonian captivity.
The Temple built upon the end of the Babylonian Captivity was a modest one, small and simple.
It is therefore widely speculated that Jewish interest in angels developed during the Babylonian captivity.
The Jews lived in the land of Babylon for more than 2,500 years following the Babylonian captivity.
Abimelech's sleep is here of 70 years, the usual duration of the Babylonian captivity.
He was captured and brought to Babylon along with many of his subjects beginning the Babylonian Captivity.
The Babylonian Captivity had a number of serious effects on Judaism and the Jewish culture.
It is also the state which freed the Israelites (Jews) from their Babylonian captivity.
The Babylonian Captivity... it's happening all over again.
This verse covers the section somewhat after the Babylonian Captivity six generation before Jesus.
Babylonian Captivity for the Jews began.
Babylonian captivity may also refer to:
He later went in Babylonia during the Babylonian captivity where he met Daniel.
Possibly it did, he added, but if not, at least some elements of the book were current before the Babylonian exile.
The next stage took place during the Babylonian exile.
Some Jews appear to have lived there after the return from the Babylonian exile, however.
Jews have lived in Greece possibly since the Babylonian exile.
This same divine presence is on the move again; this time accompanying the Babylonian exile.
It was during the Babylonian exile that the patriarchs finally got their monotheistic ducks in a row.
Diaspora is the term used for the dispersion of the Jewish people after the Babylonian exile.
Their "Babylonian exile" lasted for two years and three months from January 1704 to April 1706.
The first historical references to the Samaritans date from the Babylonian Exile.
According to traditional rabbinic dating, this took place about fifty-two years after the start of the Babylonian Exile.
Micah addresses the future of Judah/Israel after the Babylonian exile.
After the Babylonian exile, the Targum was completely forgotten.
The need for a second festival day arises from problems encountered by Jews living in the Diaspora following the Babylonian exile.
During the Babylonian exile, Sabbath and circumcision became the characteristic symbols of the Jewish people.
The return to the Holy Land has been the aspiration of many Jews since the Babylonian exile.
This changed by the onset of the Jewish nation's returning from Babylonian exile and the building of the temple anew.
Finally there was R, the Redactor who, after the return from the Babylonian Exile, put all the books into something like their present form.
Here are the treasures tasted, that with tears Were in the Babylonian exile won, When gold had fail'd them.
After the Babylonian exile, they came under the Persian Empire, as they prospered and spread through the area.
In the temple rebuilt after the Babylonian Exile the Golden Altar was restored.
Prior to the Babylonian exile, the names of only four months are referred to in the Tanakh:
It appears in the Bible as a Jewish leader during the Babylonian exile (Ezra 8:9).
This title, however, is found neither in the Torah itself, nor in the works of the Babylonian Exile literary prophets.
So do comparisons of Lumumba with Moses, leading his people out of a Babylonian exile in their own land.
Some suggest that strict monotheism developed during the Babylonian Exile, perhaps in reaction to Zoroastrian dualism.