History is the events that mark the passage of time.
Most of Hebrew History comes from the Bible, but there is some archeology as well.
The Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) has information about the Hebrew leaders. See also:http://judaism.answers.com/jewish-history/timeline-of-jewish-history
The Hebrew Bible, also called the Tanach (×ª× ×´×š)
The oldest recorded history of the Hebrew is in the 24 books of the Hebrew Bible. It is also extractable from the artificacts found all over the Middle East.
The Hebrew Bible views history as the interactions between people and God, and between people and people. History is laden with lessons and is a lesser form of Torah, to be studied and contemplated (Deuteronomy 32:7). In many cases, the Hebrew Bible and the Talmud (Sotah 9b-14a, for example) spell out the lessons explicitly.
She is the first woman in history to be the first Hebrew judge :) Natile
The Bible has the history of the Hebrew people, the warnings of the prophets, the prophecies of the bible and in the new testament the teaching of Jesus.
The Hebrew Bible is not Babylonian.The Hebrew Bible is not Babylonian.
There isn't just one document. There is a collection of documents called the Torah, the Prophets and the Holy Writings. In Hebrew it's known as the Tanakh (תנ״ך) and in English it's called the Hebrew Bible.
James L. Kugel has written: 'On being a Jew' -- subject(s): Orthodox Judaism, Miscellanea 'The Bible As It Was (Belknap)' 'Poetry and Prophecy' 'Shem in the Tents of Japhet' 'The idea of biblical poetry' -- subject(s): Bible, Biblical Hebrew poetry, Criticism, interpretation, Hebrew language, Hebrew poetry, Biblical, History, History and criticism, Parallelism 'In Potiphar's house' -- subject(s): Bible, Criticism, interpretation, History and criticism, Narration in the Bible, Rabbinical literature 'Early biblical interpretation' -- subject(s): Bible, Criticism, interpretation, History
They are not. The Talmud is commentary on the Hebrew Bible. See also:http://judaism.answers.com/jewish-literature/the-writings-of-judaism-torah-talmud-and-more
No. There is no mention of Romans in the Hebrew Bible. The Romans conquered Judea After the Hebrew Bible was already canonized.