No. Judah or Judea started approximately at the southern tip of Jerusalem and extended southward past Hebron. More information on the boundaries can be found at http://www.answers.com/topic/judea
In the King James version the word - Judah - appears 812 times the word - Judah's - appears 4 times and the word - Bethlehemjudah - appears 10 times
In the King James version the word - Judah - appears 812 times the word - Judah's - appears 4 times and the word - Bethlehemjudah - appears 10 times
Kings of Ancient Israel and Judah.
When the state was first established, the people who established it were strictly secularists, and there was a militant "rebellion against the past." The name "Judah" is a bit too ancient sounding, too archaic. Israel is ancient too, but it is nowhere near as archaic sounding. In the actual ancient times, when the unified Kingdom of David split into the northern Kingdom of Israel, and the southern Kingdom of Judah, the northern kingdom was renamed "Israel" to rebel against the rule of the tribe of Judah. The northern Israelites, had rejected Judaism in favor of pagan worship, religious split is what caused the division.
In ancient times, Egypt was bordered by Nubia, (kush) The roman empire, and the Liybian desert. In modern times, Egypt is bordered by Sudan, Jordan, and Libia.
The Jordan Times was created in 1975.
Jordan.
The name "Judah" is in the King James Version of the Bible 814 times. It is in 752 verses.
Mesopotamia
written by:Jamie Jordan
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.
Amman (once renamed Philadelphia) has been a capital of the region of Jordan since Roman times. However, during Ottoman rule, the capital was at Salt (Al Salt), slightly farther to the west.