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* Biblical Researches in Palestine, the Sinai, Petrae and Adjacent Regions by Edward Robinson, based on his survey conducted over several years, proposes identification of Biblical names with modern sites.
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Biblical and Researches
* Robinson, Edward, Eli Smith ( 1841 ): Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: A Journal of Travels in the Year 1838, Published by Crocker & Brewster, Item notes: v. 2 p. 257, 279, 305
* Robinson, Edward, Eli Smith ( 1841 ): Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: A Journal of Travels in the Year 1838a, Published by Crocker & Brewster, Item notes: v. 2
* Robinson, Edward, Eli Smith ( 1841 ): Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: A Journal of Travels in the Year 1838a, Published by Crocker & Brewster, Item notes: v. 3 ( p. 161, p. 169, p. 195 )
* Robinson, Edward, Eli Smith ( 1841 ): Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: A Journal of Travels in the Year 1838a, Published by Crocker & Brewster, Item notes: v. 3 ( p. 376 )
* Robinson, Edward, Eli Smith ( 1841 ): Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: A Journal of Travels in the Year 1838a, Published by Crocker & Brewster, Item notes: v. 3
* Robinson, Edward, Eli Smith ( 1841 ): Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: A Journal of Travels in the Year 1838, Published by Crocker & Brewster, Item notes: v. 2
# Bunsen's Biblical Researches by Rowland Williams —" denying the predictive character of Old Testament prophecies "
In his Biblical Researches in Palestine, Edward Robinson describes it as the fruit of the Asclepias gigantea vel procera, a tree 10 – 15 feet high, with a grayish cork-like bark called osher by the Arabs.
* Edward Robinson Biblical Researches in Palestine and Adjacent Countries ( first published in three volumes, Boston and London, 1841 );
Biblical and Palestine
Deff-Tambourine, Palestine, picture p. 579 in W. M. Thomson: The Land and the Book ; or Biblical Illustrations Drawn from the Manners and Customs, the Scenes and Scenery of the Holy Land.
* Blakely, Jeffrey, " The Location of Medieval / Pre-Modern and Biblical Ziklag ," Palestine Exploration Quarterly, 139, 1 ( 2007 ), 21-26.
Music of Israel: Early Zionist settlers in Palestine, as far back as the 1880s, sought to create a new mode of Jewish folk music that was based on Biblical musical modes that had long since been abandoned.
A prolific author, his major works include Yahweh and the Gods of Canaan, The Archaeology of Palestine: From the Stone Age to Christianity, and The Biblical Period from Abraham to Ezra.
He shared the view of such scholars as Thomas L. Thompson that there is a severe mismatch between the Biblical narrative and the archaeological findings in Palestine.
Following the Arab conquest of Palestine and Mesopotamia, much work was done by the Masoretes in standardizing and refining the pronunciation of Biblical Hebrew, under the influence of the Arabic grammarians of the time: this included establishing the pronunciation of the guttural letters by reference to their Arabic equivalents.
Depiction of Biblical Palestine in c. 1020 BCE according to George Adam Smith's 1915 Atlas of the Historical Geography of the Holy Land.
In his 1997 book, Palestinian Identity: The Construction of Modern National Consciousness, historian Rashid Khalidi notes that the archaeological strata that denote the history of Palestine — encompassing the Biblical, Roman, Byzantine, Umayyad, Fatimid, Crusader, Ayyubid, Mamluk and Ottoman periods — form part of the identity of the modern-day Palestinian people, as they have come to understand it over the last century, but derides the efforts of some Palestinian nationalists to attempt to " anachronistically " read back into history a nationalist consciousness that is in fact " relatively modern.
He concludes: " The Afghan ’ s accounts of Jacob and Esau, of Moses and the Exodus, of the Wars of the Israelites with the Amalekites and conquest of Palestine, of the Ark of the Covenant and of the election of Saul to the Kingdom, etc., etc., are clearly founded on the Biblical records, and clearly indicate a knowledge of the Old Testament, which if it does not prove the presence of the Christians at least corroborates their assertion that the Afghans were readers of the Pentateuch.
V ( 1968 ) and articles in academic journals such as the Journal of Biblical Literature, Palestine Exploration Quarterly and Journal of Semitic Studies, and in the popular press.
Biblical and Sinai
Biblical scholars describe the Bible's theologically-motivated history writing as " salvation history ", meaning a history of God's saving actions that give identity to Israel-the promise of offspring and land to the ancestors, the exodus from Egypt ( in which God saves Israel from slavery ), the wilderness wandering, the revelation at Sinai, and the hope for the future life in the promised land.
After numerous years of migration, which led the Visigoths to compare themselves to the Biblical Hebrew people wandering for 40 years in the Sinai Desert, the Visigoths settled in southern Gaul as foederati of the Romans in 418.
" Moses ' Mountain " or " Mount Moses "; Har Sinai ), also known as Mount Horeb, is a mountain in the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt that is the traditional and most accepted identification of the Biblical Mount Sinai.
* Biblical Mount Sinai, a discussion of possible locations for the Bible's " Mount Sinai ," the site where Moses received the Law of God
Tamarisk trees ( particularly Tamarix gallica ) were once comparatively extensive throughout the southern Sinai, and their resin is similar to wax, melts in the sun, is sweet and aromatic ( like honey ), and has a dirty-yellow color, fitting somewhat with the Biblical descriptions of manna.
The town was named after Sinaia Monastery, around which it was built ; the monastery in turn is named after the Biblical Mount Sinai.
However, in the 4th century, under the Byzantine Empire, the monastery built there was abandoned in favour of the newer belief that Mount Saint Catherine was the Biblical Mount Sinai ; a new monastery-St. Catherine's Monastery was built at its foot, and the alleged site of the biblical burning bush was identified.
Much later, in Abrahamic traditions, the bull motif became a bull demon or the ' horned devil ' in contrast and conflict to earlier traditions. The bull is familiar in Judeo-Christian cultures from the Biblical episode wherein an idol of the Golden Calf is made by Aaron and worshipped by the Hebrews in the wilderness of Sinai ( Exodus ).
The disappearance of the Pelusian arm of the Nile led to much confusion regarding the Biblical geography of Sinai.
Moses ( born c. 16th – 13th Century BC ; 7 Adar 2368 – 7 Adar 2488 in the Hebrew calendar ), an early Biblical Hebrew religious leader, lawgiver, prophet, and military leader, condemns his own people upon finding them worshiping a ' golden calf ' ( a symbol of the previous Age of Taurus and of the worship of the bull deity ) after coming down Mount Sinai.
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