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Nebuchadnezzar And Jerusalem

Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research, 1979
The events which led to the Babylonian Captivity are well known. Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon in 605, recovered Syria and Palestine which had been seized by the Egyptians in 609. His army returned to the territory west of the Euphrates in 604 (when he captured the city of Ashkelon), and again in 603.
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Jerusalem, Sanhedriya

Hadashot Arkheologiyot - Excavations and Surveys in Israel, 2013
During May 2012, a salvage excavation was conducted in the Sanhedriyya quarter of Jerusalem (Permit No. A-6508; map ref. 220762-74/634171-88; Fig. 1), prior to construction. The excavation, undertaken on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority and underwritten by A.
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Jerusalem, Survey in the Jerusalem Forest

Hadashot Arkheologiyot - Excavations and Surveys in Israel, 2006
A development survey that was conducted in the Jerusalem Forest, west of the city, examined an area that is delimited by Nahal ‘Ein Kerem to the south, Nahal Ma‘ale Roma’im to the north and Nahal Soreq to the west (License No. G-13/2001*; map ref. NIG 21554–800/63000–330; OIG
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Jerusalem

2022
Abstract In the century since Parry set it to music, ‘Jerusalem’ has become emblematic of a conventional view of Englishness as a rural vision of a green and pleasant land. Yet when William Blake wrote the stanzas to his Preface to Milton, he had recently been tried for sedition and even Parry, having composed his music during the First ...
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‘A Little Jerusalem’ and ‘A Great Jerusalem’

2004
In these terms the Sephardim of the seventeenth century referred respectively to Hamburg and Amsterdam.1 In the resettlement of western Europe these port-cities were central to the incentives offered by the Atlantic economy. The conversos from Portugal, towards the end of the sixteenth century and beginning of the seventeenth, followed in the wake of ...
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The Civic Prayer for Jerusalem

Harvard Theological Review, 1962
The sole daily prayer of the Synagogue, in the proper sense of the word prayer, preces, that is of a request for well-being, is the Tefillah, the “Intercession,” also called Amidah, since it is recited standing. The prayer consists of eighteen sections, each concluded by the same formula: “Blessed be Thou, YHWH.” Thence, the popular name of the prayer:
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Jerusalem

1970
Herder Korrespondenz, Bd. 5 Nr.
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