In the first century AD the Israelites revolted against the Roman Empire. In response, the Roman Empire mounted a full offensive against the whole Jewish nation and killed, captured or drove the all the Israelites from the entire area.
They didn't. The Ottomans arrived in Anatolia and the Levant in the mid 1200s C.E. The Israelites had been replaced by the Judeans (as a political and religious grouping) by the mid 600s B.C.E. and the Judeans had been exiled from Judea by 70 C.E. The Ottomans had positive relations with the Jewish communities (especially relative to contemporaneous civilizations) but had no influence on the Israelites.
The Israelites as such never lived in Mesopotamia. Abraham abandoned Mesopotamia before the Israelites grew as a nation. When Judea was captured and the population transferred to Babylon, the people had already begun to be called Judeans or Jews, not Israelites. The dominant population currently in Mesopotamia are the Arabs who are mostly ethnic Babylonians who have intermarried with ethnic Arabians and adopted their culture and religion. Mesopotamia also has a Kurdish population in the north and several Assyrian and Babylonian Christian minorities.
judea paid tribute
The Jews first settled the West Bank or as it was known then "Judea and Samaria" 3200 years ago. King David further cemented Jewish hold on Judea and Samaria when he declared Jerusalem his capital. Jews resided throughout the ages in cities such as Hebron, Shchem (Nablus) and (East) Jerusalem but were forced to flee following Jordanian occupation in 1948. Jews started returning to Judea and Samaria (West Bank) in 1967 right after Israel gained control of the territory. Today around 20% of the population in the West Bank is Jewish and their share keeps growing.
AnswerChristianity is believed to have started in Galilee and Judea.
The Kingdom of Israel was finally destroyed by the Assyrians in 722 BCE and many of the people who did not flee to Judah or Egypt deported, never to return. So, in the time of Jesus, there was no Kingdom of Israel and there had not been for over seven centuries. The land of the Israelites had become Samaria, the land of the Samarians, or Samaritans. Judea and Samaria were under Roman rule.
They didn't. The Ottomans arrived in Anatolia and the Levant in the mid 1200s C.E. The Israelites had been replaced by the Judeans (as a political and religious grouping) by the mid 600s B.C.E. and the Judeans had been exiled from Judea by 70 C.E. The Ottomans had positive relations with the Jewish communities (especially relative to contemporaneous civilizations) but had no influence on the Israelites.
The Israelites as such never lived in Mesopotamia. Abraham abandoned Mesopotamia before the Israelites grew as a nation. When Judea was captured and the population transferred to Babylon, the people had already begun to be called Judeans or Jews, not Israelites. The dominant population currently in Mesopotamia are the Arabs who are mostly ethnic Babylonians who have intermarried with ethnic Arabians and adopted their culture and religion. Mesopotamia also has a Kurdish population in the north and several Assyrian and Babylonian Christian minorities.
They didn't flee. They were forcibly exiled by the Babylonians.
Judea
Judea is not a relligion it is a country
Prior to the Ten Plagues, Moses requested that the Israelites have permission to go to desert to pray to their God. Pharaoh presumed that this was an attempt to flee into the wilderness and denied the request.
Judea was a historic region in the Southern Levant, located to the south of Jerusalem. It was the homeland of the Jewish people and played a significant role in ancient Jewish history, particularly during the time of the Second Temple period and the Roman occupation.
The corresponding noun to the verb flee is flight.
Judea Pearl was born in 1936.
The capital of Judea during Jesus' time was Jerusalem.
The defendant was then seen to flee the scene. Flee from the danger!