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... 27:8 ) . The ruins were examined in 1856 by G. Brown (see Code of Hammurabi (St. P), chapter xxiii, 640) . If Paul's ship ...
https://bibleatlas.org/lasea.htm
... the name of the sacred grove or tree (Jahwist) and synonymous with Hebron (Priestly Code); and Eschol-a name of a valley (lit. "grape cluster") from ...
https://bibleatlas.org/aner.htm
... compare 1 Kings 4:17 ) . Such a prominent and commanding position must always have invited fortification. In the time of Antiochus the Great, 218 B.C., we find a ...
https://bibleatlas.org/mount_tabor.htm
... at Aphek they remained masters of this fortress. In order to recover it for Israel Ahab invited Jehoshaphat of Judah to accompany him in a campaign. Despite the discouragement of Micalab, the ...
https://bibleatlas.org/ramoth_3.htm
... at Aphek they remained masters of this fortress. In order to recover it for Israel Ahab invited Jehoshaphat of Judah to accompany him in a campaign. Despite the discouragement of Micalab, the ...
https://bibleatlas.org/ramah_5.htm
... given as synonyms with the meaning of "road." Paddan-aram occurs only in the Priestly Code (P ), but it corresponds to the "Haran" of the older documents. ...
https://bibleatlas.org/paddan.htm
... Buhl, who identifies Mahanaim with Michneh, yet cites this verse (G A the Priestly Code (P ), 112) as a case in which kikkar applies to the plain of ...
https://bibleatlas.org/mahanaim.htm
... years, that Absalom had sheepshearers in Baal Hazor, which is beside Ephraim: and Absalom invited all the king's sons. Encyclopedia BAAL-HAZOR ba-al-ha' zor ba`al chatsor; Bailasor, Bel-la-sor ...
https://bibleatlas.org/baal-hazor.htm
... given as synonyms with the meaning of "road." Paddan-aram occurs only in the Priestly Code (P ), but it corresponds to the "Haran" of the older documents. ...
https://bibleatlas.org/paddan-aram.htm
... miles of the site of modern Suez. M. G. Kyle Strong's Hebrew H6367: Pi Hachiroth a place on the E. border of Egypt ...
https://bibleatlas.org/pi-hahiroth.htm
... . of Ismailia. It was a temple city dedicated to the god Tum, the syllable Pi means "city," or "place", and it was in the district of ...
https://bibleatlas.org/pithom.htm
... at Aphek they remained masters of this fortress. In order to recover it for Israel Ahab invited Jehoshaphat of Judah to accompany him in a campaign. Despite the discouragement of Micalab, the ...
https://bibleatlas.org/ramoth-gilead.htm
... compare 1 Kings 4:17 ) . Such a prominent and commanding position must always have invited fortification. In the time of Antiochus the Great, 218 B.C., we find a ...
https://bibleatlas.org/tabor.htm
... in the use of these various words, a discrimination which is found alike in the Priestly Code (P ), Jahwist (Jahwist), and Elohim (E ) of the documentary ...
https://bibleatlas.org/brook_of_egypt.htm
... , in general, derived from Babylonia and much of it was connected with trade. The code of Khammu-rabi (Code of Hammurabi) or AMRAPHEL (which see) underlay it, and ...
https://bibleatlas.org/assyria.htm
... But the gradual descent of the land to the West with long, wide valleys, offered inviting avenues from the plain. The great trade routes, that to the fords of Jordan and ...
https://bibleatlas.org/harmon.htm
... ." This moderation secured the fidelity of the Chaldeans, and when the Elamite Urtaku sent inviting them to revolt against their suzerain, they answered to the effect that Na'id-Marduk was their lord ...
https://bibleatlas.org/chaldea.htm
... the social conditions of the people. It is also valuable for comparative purposes in studying the codes of other peoples. See CODE OF HAMMURABI . The commercial or legal transactions, dated in ...
https://bibleatlas.org/babylonia.htm
... became wholly Babylonian; even its theology and gods were derived from Babylonia. The famous legal code of Khammu-rabi (see HAMMURABI, CODE OF) was enforced in Canaan as in other parts ...
https://bibleatlas.org/canaan.htm
... a large body of migrating Gauls (Galatai in Greek) crossed over from Europe at the invitation of Nikomedes, king of Bithynia; after ravaging a great part of Western Asia Minor they ...
https://bibleatlas.org/galatia.htm
... their defense. The people early became mariners, and the dominion of the sea was more inviting to them, and they found room for expansion in the islands and on the coast of ...
https://bibleatlas.org/phoenicia.htm
... became wider than it had been before, and its internal affairs more settled. His civil code was in force long after his dynasty was extinct, and was adopted in the Southern Kingdom ...
https://bibleatlas.org/israel.htm
... fruitful soil, "full of the plantations of trees of all sorts, insomuch that it invites the most slothful to pains in its cultivation by its fruitfulness; accordingly it is all cultivated ...
https://bibleatlas.org/galilee.htm
... they were left unbefriended. An old man from Mt. Ephraim took pity on them, invited them to his house, and made himself responsible for their necessities. Then follows the horrible ...
https://bibleatlas.org/gibeah.htm
... by his son Kutir-Nahhunte, destroyed Sippar, and took away the stele of Naram-Sin, the code of Hammurabi, and several other monuments, which were carefully preserved at Susa. He also ...
https://bibleatlas.org/elam.htm