No - Nothing existed before 'Biblical Times' except God.
No. Israel existed before Golda Meir became important in Israeli politics.
A:Even those who believe in the historicity of the stories of Abraham and his descendants, who were the biblical ancestors of the twelve tribes of Israel, acknowledge that Egypt existed long before the time of Abraham. The ancient Egyptians were not even a Semitic people, so there was no close ethnic relationship between the Egyptians and the Israelites.
Before the Creation, only God existed. Nothing else; not even space or time. See also:Is there evidence for Creation?Can you show that God exists?Seeing God's wisdom
It seems that there have always been homosexuals. In another biblical reference, eerily reminiscent of the biblical story of Sodom and Gomorrah, it tells that the Benjamites, one of the tribes of Israel, were homosexual.
There is not biblical evidence that Paul murdered a partner. Nor is there any evidence that he ever journeyed to India.
AnswerThere is nothing about the biblical Garden of Eden in the history or pre-history of Africa, nor any geological of fossil evidence of any such garden in Africa. Early humans lived in Africa millions of years before the time the Garden of Eden is supposed to have existed.
The historical position is that neither Noah nor Adam and Eve actually existed. The biblical position is that Noah was after Adam and Eve.
No,because geologist have evidence that,before Pangaea existed, other supercontinents formed and split apart over billions of years. And the answer is right because i took it out of the Science book!!
Before it was called Israel, the land was known as Canaan.
The Modern State of Israel has never ceased being a country since it was founded in 1948. If the question is referring to the Biblical Kingdom of Northern Israel, it was conquered by the Assyrians in 722 B.C.E. If the question is referring to the last Jewish State to fall before the establishment of the Modern State of Israel it is the Hasmonean Kingdom which fell to the Romans in 63 B.C.E.
Israelites (Yisraelim in Biblical Hebrew), Hebrews (a term first used probably by Ancient Egyptians) and Bnei Yisrael ("Children of Israel") are all terms used for Jews before the Common Era.