The dsitance look approximately 40 miles to sheckem and then another 20 miles to Beth shean where Jesus was headed.
According to the Easton's Bible Dictionary it is 35 miles in a straight line from Jerusalem to Samaria.
No, it is only about 16 miles to the border with Jordan.
About 31 miles.
Judea is area of mountains that are located closely to Jerusalem. There is approximately 6,070 miles between Judea and Samaria, Michigan.
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.
The story is found in the 4th chapter of the Gospel of John. The place was Jacob's Well, at the city of Sychar in Samaria.
The distance from Jerusalem to Sychar (near modern Nablus) is approximately 70-80 miles (113-129 kilometers). If a person walks about 20-25 miles a day, it would take roughly 3-4 days to complete the journey, depending on their pace and the exact route taken. Additionally, factors such as rest breaks and terrain could influence the overall time.
The Bible does not specify the exact time it took Jesus to walk from Jerusalem to Samaria. The distance between the two locations is approximately 30 miles (about 48 kilometers), and walking this distance would likely take a couple of days, depending on the route and pace. Jesus often traveled with his disciples, which could have affected the speed of their journey.
The question you have asked contains almost all that is known of the woman of Samaria. She was a resident of Sychar, a town in Samaria. She had had 5 husbands and was living with a man to whom she wasn't married. None of the accounts of Jesus' encounter with the woman at the well contain the woman's name. Jesus remained in Sychar for two days. It is highly probable that He and the disciples learned the woman's name (and her boyfriend's) during that time. Those names, whatever they were, were known only to the people there present. They were nowhere recorded in Scripture.
Try Micah
Yes. Samaria was the capital of the northern Kingdom of Israel. (Gibeah, Hebron, and Jerusalem were the capitals of the United Kingdom of Israel.)
In Sychar, Jesus spoke with a Samaritan woman at a well, revealing His identity as the Messiah to her. He offered her living water, which symbolized eternal life that He could provide. This encounter led to many Samaritans in the town believing in Jesus as the Savior of the world.