No. There is no mention of Romans in the Hebrew Bible. The Romans conquered Judea After the Hebrew Bible was already canonized.
the capital city of Judah is Jerusalem. both were conquered by both Israel and Judah. Jerusalem.
The Babylonian Empire.
Roman.
He treated it as a minor province.
rome
They renames it: Judaea
The Romans conquered Judah and renamed it Judea. They kept strict control over Judea. The Jews were allowed to have Jewish kings and religious leaders, but these kings and leaders were appointed by Rome.
Judah is the ancient name of the southern Hebrew kingdom. The Romans gave the name Judaea to Judah. Judaea is usually written simply as Judea today.
Assyria conquered Israel, then Babylon conquered Assyria and Judah, then Persia conquered Babylon, then the Seuclid Empire conquered Judah, then the Judeans revolted, then Rome conquered Judah, then the Islamic Caliphate conquered the Byzantine Empire (the remains of the Roman Empire). The Ottoman Empire conquered Judah from the Cusaders who had conquered it from its Islamic rulers. Then the British Empire took it from the Ottomans.
The Babylonians conquered Jerusalem and destroyed the First Temple. They exiled many Israelites to Babylon, known as the Babylonian Captivity or Babylonian exile, which lasted for about 70 years until the Persian Empire overthrew Babylon and allowed the Israelites to return to their homeland.
The bible records the first to fully conquer and enslave the Southern Kingdom of Judah was the Babylonian Empire in circa 586 BC.
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The term "Jews" originated from the word "Judah," which in Hebrew is "Yehudah." The name change for the Hebrew people did not occur in the Bible. It is believed to have happened later, during the Babylonian exile in the 6th century BCE, when the descendants of the tribe of Judah and other Israelite tribes came to be collectively known as Jews.
the capital city of Judah is Jerusalem. both were conquered by both Israel and Judah. Jerusalem.
63 bc
egyptians
Yehudah (not "Judah," which is a mistaken transliteration, as are most names in translations of the Hebrew Bible). In Hebrew, it is spelled יהודה.See also:More about Yehudah