Results 31 to 40 of about 80 (75)

Hagars Rache

open access: yes, 2012
Source: Felix Dahn: Gesammelte Werke. Erzählende und poetische Schriften, Zweite Reihe, Band 5: Gedichte und Balladen (Auswahl), Leipzig: Breitkopf und Härtel, 1912.
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Hagar noire

open access: yesRelRace - Religions, lignages et « race », 2022
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Ängar och hagar

open access: yes, 1987
De äldre inslagen i odlingslandskapet, som exempelvis natur­liga slåtter- och betesmarker, är en hotad resurs. Många sådana marker har uppmärksammats både i samband med naturinventeringar och studier av landskap av kulturhistoriskt intresse. Någon systematisk inventering efter enhetliga prin­ciper har emellertid inte utförts.
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Hagar's Song

open access: yesThe Iowa Review, 1997
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Hagar Espanha Gomes

open access: yesCiência da Informação, 1996
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Hagar

2017
This chapter focuses on Hagar and her mourning in the wilderness of Beersheba (Gen. 21). Although Gen. 21:14–21 does not contain a case of child death proper, a few lexemes utilized in it represent Ishmael’s endangerment as an instance of dishonourable ejection from the family and a subsequent demise in the wilderness.
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Hagar Requited

Journal for the Study of the Old Testament, 2000
This paper provides a unique and textually justified reading that affords greater understanding of the biblical representation of Sarah, Hagar, Abraham, Ishmael and God. It argues for the privileged position of Hagar's suffering in God's precise economy of crime and punishment, details the conspicuous parallels between Hagar's ordeal and Moses ...
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Hagar

2019
Hagar is a biblical character in the book of Genesis. She has an important role as wife of Abram/Abraham and mother of Ishmael. As such, she is an important figure within Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. In Genesis 16, she is introduced as an Egyptian slave woman who belongs to Abram’s wife Sarai.
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Hagar Banished:

Early Science and Medicine, 2012
The Aldine edition of Galen’s works, prepared by humanists anxious to replace the medieval Latin translations with a purely Greek text, certainly represents an advance in scholarship. However, widespread anti-Arabic prejudices of the time precluded most humanists, including the Aldine editors, from perceiving anything of value in the Latin Galenic ...
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