If it refers to the idolatrous image which the Seleucids (Syrian-Greeks) placed in the Jewish Temple, then the answer is 165 BCE, when the Maccabees rededicated the Temple to God. Though some passages in Daniel are explained as prophesying the wars of the Maccabees, the one which your Question is quoting (Daniel 12:11) is interpreted by Jewish commentaries as referring to the Second Destruction (in 68 CE), when the Romans razed the Temple and put their idols in its place. By that time, the Maccabees were no longer extant.
They were Jewish.
The Maccabees were armed primarily with Hellenistic-style weapons, such as swords, spears, short-bows, and shields.
Desolation is not important in the Middle East. If you meant to ask about Desalination, please see the Relatd Question below.
The Maccabees revolted against the Syrian-Greeks not to achieve political independence, but in order to be able to observe the commands of the Torah, which the Syrian-Greeks had forbidden at the instigation of the Hellenizing (irreligious) Jews. If it were not for the action of the Maccabees, who knows if religious Jewry would have been able to continue.
Hannukah.
No, the Dome of the Rock is not considered the abomination of desolation. The abomination of desolation is a term used in religious texts to refer to a prophesied event, while the Dome of the Rock is a historic Islamic shrine located in Jerusalem.
You have ignored the facts. That caused abomination among people.
Something very shameful and vile!! Also something greatly disliked. The word "abomination" means that which is hated and loathed. It is often referred to as part of a Biblical reference from the Book of Daniel in the Old Testament (or Hebrew Bible). The reference is the "abomination of desolation" which some scholars have interpreted as a reference to the greatest evil which must be destroyed in order for peace to reign forever. Christians sometimes interpret the "abomination of desolation" to be a reference to the "Anti-Christ".
that would be hard. first because they both have healing abilitys and abomination is stronger than hulk at his normal strength and juggernaut is equally as strong as hulk but he is invulnerable and indestructable. but abomination is imprevious to pain too but juggs is unstoppable but abomination is stronger. so that's even.
The abomination of desolation standing in the holy place is a significant event in religious prophecy and scripture, particularly in the context of the end times. It is often associated with the Antichrist or a sacrilegious act that defiles a sacred place, signaling the coming of a major upheaval or judgment. This event is mentioned in the Bible, specifically in the books of Daniel and Matthew, as a warning of impending tribulation and the need for spiritual vigilance.
The Syrian ruler, Antiochus IV Epiphanes (175-164 BCE) punished Jewish attempts at resistance by attacking Jerusalem, slaughtering the population, plundering the Temple and erecting a statue to Zeus on the Temple altar of burnt offering. This was what the author of Daniel referred to as "the abomination of desolation". It began in 169 BCE and continued in 167 BCE.This persecution constituted the context of the Book of Daniel, which used descriptions of the Babylonian kings of the 6th century BCE to decry the Syrian rulers of the second century BCE.
Maccabees died in -167.
Maccabees was born in -1##.
The Abomination was created in 2000.
Abomination
The deliberate setting of the fires in the forests of the western states was an abomination.
The sight of cruelty towards animals is an abomination to me.