You would travel east.
From Nazareth to Jerusalem, going South, it is about 70 miles. Continuing south from Jerusalem to Bethlehem, it is approximately another 5-8 miles. Most likely as 1/12th of those living in Nazareth that were required to go to Bethlehem for the Census, they would have travelled in a group or caravan. This would have taken between 4-10 days to complete.
35.6 days
As it was about 100 miles from each city , and they traveled on a donkey which does not travel fast like a horse, and Joseph walked it would take over a week.
None did. You mean Bethlehem?
In terms of historical events, that would be Bethlehem and Jerusalem.
To travel to Greenland to Alaska, in what direction would you travel.
southeast
you would have to travel northwest.
It would be fair to say that the whole of Christianity finds Jerusalem as the most holy site for them - indeed for all mankind - and as far as the God of the Bible is concerned - aka, the City of David. In the 'new Earth' found in Revelation 21, God will live with Jesus in the New Jerusalem. Concerning other sites, this is basically an opinion type question. Some will say Bethlehem, some Rome, some Nazareth...the list goes on and on depending upon the denomination you ask.
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.
you would have to travel north