Anything modest and dignified.
The average height of Greeks in ancient times was around 5 feet 6 inches for men and 5 feet 2 inches for women.
The average height of Roman women during ancient times was around 5 feet 2 inches.
The average height of Romans during ancient times was around 5 feet 6 inches for men and 5 feet 2 inches for women.
In ancient mesopotamia, men protected the women. They hunted and fished and alot of times attended scribe school to become scribes to the king,
Given that Hitler was trying to exterminate the Jews, you can guess their feelings. There's no reason to think the reaction of Jewish women was any different from that of Jewish men.
During ancient times, only Jewish men were allowed in the synagogue. Women were typically not permitted to enter the main sanctuary and instead participated in separate areas or rooms.
At the synagogue and at home.
whenever they want really
They pray separately in the synagogue.
1) A synagogue in which the women's section is in a raised balcony. 2) A synagogue in which the men and women are both on the ground floor in separate seating areas.See also:More about Jewish prayers and the synagogue
The sisterhood, led by the president of the sisterhood.
That depends on the design of the synagogue.
Married religiously observant Jewish women cover their hair in public once they're married, not just in synagogue. Less observant Jewish women who are married often cover their hair in synagogue. This is due to the Torah specifying that a woman's hair is sensual and her beauty should be reserved for her husband.
A synagogue is the equivalent of a church but it is Jewish. Inside there is the ark which holds the Torah, that's like the bible, and the menorah that covers the Torah. There is a women's and a men's section.
No. In ancient times, marriages were arranged to avoid "inappropriate" choices of spouses.
The 4 matriarchs of the Jewish people are Sarah, Rebecca, Leah, and Rachel.
Chaim Trachtman has written: 'Women and men in communal prayer' -- subject(s): Jewish women, Women in Judaism, Bible, Judaism, Orthodox Judaism, Religious life, Prayer, Jewish law, Synagogue etiquette, Reading, Feminism