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AnswerSamaria, land of the Samarians or Samaritans.
A:No. Bethlehem was in the Roman province of Judea. Galilee was a different province far to the north, separated from Judea by Samaria.
All they would have to do is stay where they were. Judea was a Roman province, Galiee was a section of that province.
Yes, Galilee was an area in the Roman province of Judea.
AnswerChristianity is believed to have started in Galilee and Judea.
What had once been the Kingdom of Israel was then called Samaria.Another answer:The northernmost part of the former Kingdom of Israel in the time of Christ was Galilee, which included the towns of Nazareth and Capernaum. (Samaria was to its south, between Galilee and Judea.)
No, Galilee was a distinct region located to the north of Judea in ancient Israel. Judea was located in the southern part of the region while Galilee was situated in the north, around the Sea of Galilee.
No. Both are towns and are quite a way apart. Bethlehem is near Jerusalem while Nazareth is considerably further to the north in the Galilee region.AnswerNo. Nazareth is a town that was in the Roman province of Galilee, while Bethlehem was a town in the far-away Roman province of Judea. Sitting between the two provinces was Samaria, a territory hostile to Jews. Normally, Jews would travel between Nazareth and Bethlehem by the long way around, through the Decapolis.
The Eastern borders of Samaria, Judea and Galilee are bodies of water....the Sea of Galilee, Jordan River, and the Dead Sea. The areas east of that were Decapolis, Perea and Arabia.
Judea
Judea is a province or region, as Samaria is a region. So it can't be from Jerusalem (city) to Samaria. The distance travelled by the Lord Jesus would be from the Jordan river in Judea to Samaria en route to Galilee. This would be considerably lesser than the distance between Jerusalem (a city which is on a height) and Samaria. He could have travelled for 5-6 hours if He had started His journey at 6 am.
About 50 miles