No, they weren't.
sheba originated for Hebrew and means promise
Sheba is a Hebrew name meaning "promise" or "daughter of an oath."
Sheeba is a variant of Sheba, which means "oath" in Hebrew. It can also be a nickname for Bathsheba, which means "daughter of the oath" in Hebrew. Sheba is the name of several characters in the Old Testament. This is also a place name, referring to a region in Ethiopia.
Quote from Wikipedia: "The Queen of Sheba (Hebrew מלכת שבא Malkat Shva, Arabic ملكة سبأ Malikat ʾ, Ge'ez: ንግሥተ ሳባ Nigista Saba), referred to in the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament, the Qur'an, and Ethiopian history, was the ruler of the ancient kingdom of Sheba. The actual location of the historical kingdom may have included both Ethiopia and Yemen." This question originally asked about a "queen of Shiva." Shiva is a Hindu god, not related in any way to the queen of Sheba. Sheba was a place, where the queen of Sheba came from. She is mentioned in 1 Kings chapter 10 and 2 Chronicles chapter 9.
Moses was a Hebrew. He was said to be the deliverer and he was. He sent the Hebrew's out of Egypt!
God sent a angel to hagar and Ismael , who provided food and water.
sheba
moses is an important hebrew leader bacause god sent him to free the slaves (his people)
That's an easy one.... Use any educational-resource book for Hebrew school teachers. try: www.101letshavefun.com
The Queen of Sheba is a person in the Bible. She visited Solomon after learning about his wisdom. Sheba was located in Africa.
The Queen of Sheba was almost certainly legendary. Scholars say that, even if Solomon was a historical person, he was at most a tribal chieftain, not the king of a wealthy, powerful Near Eastern empire. The Hebrew people needed a glorious past that gave them a feeling of national pride and unified the tribes, and so we have the fabulously wealthy King Solomon and his beautiful and equally wealthy visitor, the Queen of Sheba.
In 1970. Is it not named SheBa?