-
has found the city from the Jerusalem and established is a capital of the united kingdom of Israel a ten building of the first temple.
-
to make Abraham the father of many nations and of many descendants and give "the whole land of canaan" to his descendants.
-
The Exodus (from Greek ἔξοδος exodos, "going out") is the founding, or etiological, myth of Israel; its message is that the Israelites were delivered from slavery by Yahweh and therefore belong to him through the Mosaic covenant.
-
The Roman army led by the future Emperor Titus with Tiberius Julius Alexander as his second in command besieged and conquered the city of Jerusalem which had been occupied by its Jewish defenders in 66. The siege ended with the sacking of the city and the destruction of its Second Temple.
-
he became king after David died. before david death he opponited solomen as king at 12 years old.
-
722 BCE nearly ten to twenty years after the deportations the ruling city of the Northern Kingdom of Israel Samaria was finally taken by Sargon II after a three-year siege started by Shalmaneser V. Against him came up Shalmaneser king of Assyria and Hoshea became his servant and gave him presents..
-
605 BC Nebuchadnezzar II king of Babylon won Pharaoh Necho at the Battle of Carchemish and subsequently invaded Judah. To avoid the destruction of Jerusalem King Jehoiakim of Judah in his third year changed allegiances from Egypt to Babylon.
-
In October 539 BCE the Persian king Cyrus took Babylon, the ancient capital of an empire covering modern Iraq Syria Lebanon and Israel. In a broader sense Babylon was the ancient world's capital of scholarship and science. The subject provinces soon recognized Cyrus as their legitimate ruler.
-
Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises offered up his only begotten son, of whom it was said, 'In Isaac your seed shall be called,'.
-
In the narrative of I Maccabees after Antiochus issued his decrees forbidding Jewish religious practice a rural Jewish priest from Modiin Mattathias the Hasmonean sparked the revolt against the Seleucid Empire by refusing to worship the Greek gods.