The Bible does not say. It has no sense......
Neither Luke nor Matthew in their birth stories in the gospels give us any details of the route that Mary and Joseph took, for a simple reason. The details were unnecessary and unimportant in the telling of the story. What was important was that Jesus was from Nazareth and was born in Bethlehem as a result of the emperor's taxation which fulfilled a prophesy in the Old Testament about the coming of the Messiah. However, if you look on a map of the area it seems likely that they began at Nazareth, near the Sea of Galilee (now called lake Tiberius) and travelled down the Jordan valley towards Jericho. Jericho was on a main trade route to Jerusalem, but this road (no more than a track by modern standards) was notorious for bandits and thieves, and so it is unlikely they would have taken this direct route. It is probable then that they carried on along the shores of the Dead Sea, turning east before Admah towards Bethlehem.
Galilee was were she travelled from to Bethlehem when pregnant
Mary traveled to Bethlehem by riding on a donkey with Joseph.
Joseph and Mary traveled to Bethlehem , as it was told to go to their respective hometowns for the census.
The donkey that Mary ( jesus's mum) rode to Bethlehem while she was pregnant with him
He traveled from Nazareth to Bethlehem with Mary, where Jesus was born. From Bethlehem he took his family to Egypt. From Egypt they returned to Nazareth.
Very difficult, especially because Mary was pregnant with baby Jesus.
Mary and Joseph journeyed to Bethlehem from Nazareth (in the north - in the region of Galilee) when Mary was pregnant. Jesus was then born in Bethlehem. The family settled there for two years or more and then returned to nazareth where Jesus grew up. The only other record we have of his childhood was when Mary and Joseph took him on a visit to Jerusalem (NOT Bethlehem) when he was 12 years old.
In Christianity, Bethlehem is known as the birthplace of Jesus. Joseph arrived in Bethlehem with his very pregnant wife, Mary and could not find accommodations at any inn. Desperate for shelter, they retired to a stable and Joseph made Mary as comfortable as he could in a small manger. There, she gave birth to the infant Jesus.
It's not explicitly specified, so no one knows for certain.
Mary's hometown was in Bethlehem.
The Bible does not explicitly state that Mary rode a donkey to Bethlehem. The mention of a donkey in relation to Mary's journey to Bethlehem comes from Christian tradition and popular belief rather than direct biblical text. The Gospel of Luke simply states that Mary and Joseph traveled to Bethlehem, but the mode of transportation is not specified.
The distance between Nazareth and Bethlehem is approximately 70-80 miles, depending on the specific route taken. Traveling by foot with a donkey, the journey would have taken several days to complete, likely around 4-7 days. This distance aligns with historical records of the time and the terrain of the region.