Want this question answered?
Answerstrictly speaking, the nation of Israel did not exist, and had not existed since 722 BCE. In its place was the new province of Samaria, home of the Samarians or Samaritans. To the south of Samaria lay Judea, encompassing Jerusalem and Bethlehem. The Romans controlled all Palestine, including Galilee in the north, Samaria and Judea.
de'z nuts
Nazareth was located in southern Galilee, about five miles south-east of the key city of Sepphoris. It is uncertain whether the town existed during the early part of the first century CE, but the New Testament attests to its existence.
That serious social and geographical tensions between colonists existed and threatened the colony's stability.
The tensions that existed at home was that, Many people who fought at two world wars or had taken care of the front were women (african americans, Hispanic americans, and native Americans.) worked. that's what it says in my book The World and it's People.
Yes, Christianity originated in Israel, specifically in the region of Judea during the 1st century AD. It was founded by Jesus Christ and his disciples, who were Jewish, and it gradually spread across the Roman Empire and beyond.
Pangaea.
The did not have refugee camps for the Lebanese. They were many refugee camps that already existed for the Palestinians who had fled from the Galilee of Israel during the 1948-9 Arab-Israeli War.
Myth does not describe the throne of Apollo, it was not important save that it existed as a sign of his status.
The Compromise of 1850 briefly dampened the tensions surrounding slavery that existed between the North and the South. It included five different bills.
The gospels tell us that Jesus spent most of his adult life in Galilee, and some time in Judah, whose capital city was Jerusalem. At the time of Jesus, there was no nation of Israel and had not been for approximately seven and a half centuries. The area that Israel once occupied had become known as Samaria, and Jews tended to avoid entering the region.
Seeing Bob in the yearbook triggered Ponyboy's memories of the violent altercation between Bob and Johnny that ultimately led to Johnny killing Bob in self-defense. It made Ponyboy reflect on the underlying tensions that existed between the Socs and the Greasers, and the tragic consequences that stemmed from those tensions.