The wording of this question is confusing. "Judah" was the name of the country and after Judah was conquered by the Assyrians, it never asserted independence again under that name. "Israel" is also confusing because Israel was the kingdom to the North of Judah whose inhabitants stopped associating themselves with that State by the time of the Persian Empire. If your question means to say "When were the Judeans allowed to return to Canaan following the Babylonian Exile?" the answer is the 520s-510s BCE.
Justinian.
13/16" - at least that is the size for my honda 520S snow blower.
The few instances of 'bilingual' pottery were made in the 530s and 520s BC. This is part of the Later Archaic period of Greek art.
The 520s are from WWII. It should have a date on the side.
Here are the ones I find: Sears Ranger 30, M30, 102.25 Montgomery Wards Western Field 30, M025, M35, S8033, S833, SB30A
Dewoitine D.520 The Dewoitine D.520 was slower than the Messerschmitt Bf.109E but clearly superior in manoeuvrability. A comparison was made on April 21, 1940, with an intact Bf.109E-3 that had been brought down in French territory. This comparison highlighted the fine qualities of the best French fighter of World War 11. Had France not surrendered in June 1940, the Dewoitine D.520's career might have been comparable to that of British and German fighters. Of the 775 D.520s built during the war, only 36 were on front-line duty on May 10, 1940, too few to have a significant effect.
You need to be more specific. Carthage existed from many centuries and had many military leaders. Between 500 and 370 Carthage had kings for the Magonid family who, as kings, they were also military commanders. From 370 to 310 the kings were from the Magonid or the Barca family. Hadrubal I led the Carthaginian campaigns in Sardinia in the 520s BC. Hamilcar the Magonid led the army in the First Sicilian War (480 BC). Mago Barca (not to be confused with the Mago Barca of the Second Punic War) and Hanno the Navigator led the army in the Second Sicilian War (410-340 BC). Hanno the Navigator led the army in the Third Sicilian War (315-307 BC). In the First Punic War (264-241 BC) the Carthaginian army was led by Gisco, his son Hannibal Gisco, Hanno Gisco (son of Hannibal Gisco), two commanders both called Hamilcar, Hanno the Great, Hasbrubal the Fair, Buspar Xanthippus (a Greek) and Hamilcar Barca. In the Second Punic War (218-202 BC) Hannibal Barca led a campaign in Italy. The Carthaginian military leaders in Spain during this war were: Hasdrubal Barca (Hannibal's brother), Mago Barca and Hasbrubal Gisco.
Like most emperors, Justinian I (or the Great) reformed the law by issuing new edicts - laws by imperial decree. However, what he is famous for is his collecting of centuries of Roman civil law in a single book (previously laws had been written on scrolls). This was the Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of Civil law) which was later also called the Justinian Code. This was a digest of centuries of Roman civil law and gave a uniform organisation to the law, scrapped obsolete enactments and redefined obscure passages, thus rationalising the law. It also included a collection of essays by famous jurists and a student textbook. The Corpus Juris Civilis came in four parts. 1) The Codex (book) which was a review of imperial laws going back 400 years (to the time of Hadrian). It scrapped obsolete or unnecessary laws, made changes when necessary and clarified obscure passages. Its aim was to put the laws in a single book (previously they were written on many different scrolls), harmonise conflicting view among jurists which arose from centuries of poorly organised development of Roman law and have a coherent body of law. It consists of 12 books, 1 book covers ecclesiastical law, the duties of high officers and sources of law, 7 cover private law, 1 criminal law and 3 administrative laws. 2) The Digesta which was a collection of fragments taken from essays on laws written by jurists (mostly from the 2nd and 3rd centuries) and which expressed the private opinions of legal experts. Most were from Ulpian (40%) and Paulus (17%). It was a large amount of writing which was condensed in 50 books. It was used as an advanced law student textbook. 3) The Institutiones was a textbook for first year law students written by two professors. It was a series of extracts from statements on the basic institutions of Roman law from the teaching books by 'writers of authority.' In was largely based on the texts of Gaius, a jurist of the 2nd century AD. 4) The Novellae Constitutiones, which contained laws recently issued by Justinian.