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Daniel requested (not "refused") that he should not be compelled to eat anything, or drink wine, which would be forbidden by the Jewish laws of keeping kosher. The verse (in Daniel ch.1) does not specify further. "Bread" is mentioned (Daniel 1:8, in the Hebrew), only because it refers generically to the entire meal (Rashi commentary on Leviticus 21:17, quoting [as proof] another verse in Daniel [5:1]). See also:

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Q: What did Daniel refuse to eat in Babylon?
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Related questions

Did Daniel bow down to Babylon?

No Daniel never did bow down in Babylon, so he was punished.


Where did Daniel preach?

In Babylon.


Where did Daniel living?

Babylon


In the Book of Daniel who was the king of Babylon in Daniel's day?

Nebuchadnezzer


A great ruler of Babylon?

It is Daniel


Where did the prophet Daniel live?

babylon


Who was faithful to God in Babylon?

Daniel the prophet.


Who interpreted the vision of Belshazzar of Babylon?

Daniel. The account is recorded in Daniel 5.


What is the Persian rule of Belshazzar of Babylon?

Belshazzar was a 6th-century BC prince of Babylon, the son of Nabonidus and the last king of Babylon according to the Book of Daniel in the Hebrew Bible. In Daniel 5 and 8, Belshazzar is the King of Babylon before the advent of the Medes and Persians.


Which one of the following prophetic books has a setting in Babylon?

The book of Daniel.


When Daniel first arrive in Babylon what did he refuse to do?

King Nebuchadnezzar built a huge golden statue and decreed that all his people bow down and worship it at the given signal. His decree went on to say that whoever refused to bow down to it would be thrown into a blazing furnace Daniel and his three friends were throun into the fire and they lived.


Did Daniel help bring Israel out of Babylon?

A:The Book of Daniel ends with Daniel still in Babylon, prophesying events that would occur between that time and the time when the book was actually written - approximately 167 BCE. Thus, it does not portray Daniel as helping bring the Jews out of Babylon. Leonard J Greenspoon says in 'Between Alexandria and Antioch: Jews and Judaism in the Hellenistic Period', published in The Oxford History of the Biblical World, that the Book of Daniel was a Jewish novel.