None of these. The home of the Hebrews was Israel. After the year 70 CE, when they were kicked out of Israel, The Romans renamed it "Palestine" (but the home of the Hebrews was never called Palestine).
The only exile of Jews (Judah) occurred with Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon. They were subjected to a 70 year captivity under the king of Babylon. You can read of this in the book of Jeremiah and other prophets. If you are referring to the exodus that included all 12 tribes of Israel, not just Judah it's self.
The Babylonians destroyed the First Temple and forcibly exiled the remainder of Israel's population to Babylonia.While the Jews were permitted to return to Israel (Judea) seventy years later, and tens of thousands did so (and rebuilt the Temple), most of them remained in Babylonia, while others began to settle in North Africa, southern Europe, the Crimea, throughout the Near East and elsewhere.
they are being put in to captivity so that they can mate and have babies and then bu sent back in to the wild and if people had certain times in the year to only hunt the gray wolf.
Babylon was established about 2000 BC. even thought the city of Babylon was in the past and present world (known as Iraq)
586 BCE
The carrying away of the people of Judah was not accomplished at once. There were about four groups deported to Babylon at a period before 607 B.C. Then there was the two principle deportations to Babylon, the first in 607 B.C. which probably included Daniel and other "selected children"( Daniel 1;1-4). and then the second deportation in 587 B.C. (II Kings 25:1-21). At this time the City of Jerusalem was destroyed and King Zedekiah was captured and all but the very poorest of people were taken to Babylon.There was a much earlier captivity accomplished by Sennacherib in 705 B.C. (II Kings 18:13) and it is said two hundred thousand captives were taken to Assyria from various cities.Answer:That period was called the Babylonian Exile.
Babylon in the year 586 BCE and Rome in the year 135 CE.
300,000,000,123
ca. 1200-1100B.C.E.
The New Year's began in ancient Babylon, about 4,000 years ago.
He sent it in the year of 1971.