Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BashanBashan - Wikipedia

    Bashan (/ ˈ b eɪ ʃ ə n /; Hebrew: הַבָּשָׁן, romanized: ha-Bashan; Latin: Basan or Basanitis) is the ancient, biblical name used for the northernmost region of the Transjordan during the Iron Age. It is situated in modern-day Syria.

  2. Bashan, country frequently cited in the Old Testament and later important in the Roman Empire; it is located in what is now Syria. Bashan was the northernmost of the three ancient divisions of eastern Palestine, and in the Old Testament it was proverbial for its rich pastures and thick forests.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The Golan Heights ( Arabic: هَضْبَةُ الْجَوْلَانِ, romanized : Haḍbatu l-Jawlān or مُرْتَفَعَاتُ الْجَوْلَانِ, Murtafaʻātu l-Jawlān; Hebrew: רמת הגולן, Ramat HaGolan, pronunciation ⓘ ), or simply the Golan, is a region in the Levant.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › OgOg - Wikipedia

    • Og and The Rephaim
    • Og in Non-Biblical Inscriptions
    • In The Talmud
    • In Islam
    • "Ogias The Giant"
    • Hurtaly
    • References
    • Further Reading
    • External Links

    In Deuteronomy 3:11, and later in the book of Numbers and Joshua, Og is called the last of the Rephaim. Rephaim is a Hebrew word for giants. Deuteronomy 3:11 declares that his "bedstead" (translated in some texts as "sarcophagus") of iron is "nine cubits in length and four cubits in width", which is 13.5 by 6 feet (4.1 by 1.8 m) according to the st...

    In 1974, Wolfgang Röllig published a Phoenician inscription from Byblos (Byblos 13) which he argued it contained a reference to a deity named "Og". According to Röllig, it appears in a damaged 7-line funerary inscription that Röllig dates to around 500 BC, and appears to say that if someone disturbs the bones of the occupant, "the mighty Og will av...

    The Jewish Talmud embellishes the story, stating that Og was so large that he sought the destruction of the Israelites by uprooting a mountain so large, that it would have crushed the entire Israelite encampment. The Lord caused a swarm of ants to dig away the center of the mountain, which was resting on Og's head. The mountain then fell onto Og's ...

    'Uj ibn Anaq ('Ûj ibn 'Anâq) is a giant in Islamic mythology. Uj is not namely mentioned in the Quran or canonical hadiths. The origins of this character lay in Jewish folklore and the Old Testament, e.g. king Og.[citation needed] He takes his matronymic from his mother ʿAnāqwho begat him after an incestuous affair. Famous and much-painted episodes...

    The 2nd-century BC apocryphal book "Ogias the Giant" or "The Book of Giants" depicts the adventures of a giant named Ogias who fought a great dragon, and who was supposedly either identical with the Biblical Og or was Og's father. The book enjoyed considerable currency for several centuries, especially due to having been taken up by the Manichaeanr...

    In Pantagruel, Rabelais lists Hurtaly (a version of Og) as one of Pantagruel's ancestors. He describes Hurtaly as sitting astride the Ark, saving it from shipwreckby guiding it with his feet as the grateful Noah and his family feed him through the chimney.

    Bibliography

    1. McAffee, Matthew (2022). "Biblical King Og and the Ugaritic Deity Rāpi'u: Sorting Out Two Figures in Light of the Rephaim and the Toponyms Ashtaroth and Edrei". In Hardy (II), H. H.; Lam, Joseph; Reymond, Eric D. (eds.). 'Like 'Ilu are You Wise': Studies in Northwest Semitic Languages and Literatures in Honor of Dennis G. Pardee. Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. pp. 389–403. ISBN 978-1-61491-075-6.

    Kosman, Admiel. "The Story of a Giant Story: The Winding Way of Og King of Bashan in the Jewish Aggadic Tradition'", in: HUCA 73, (2002) pp. 157–90.

    Media related to Og (giant)at Wikimedia Commons
  5. Conteúdo. ocultar. Início. Referências. Basã. Vista do Monte Bental. Basã ("Planície fértil, sem Pedras") é um lugar bíblico mencionado primeiramente em Gênesis 14:5, onde é dito que Quedorlaomer e seus aliados "feriram aos Refains em Asterote-Carnaim ", onde Ogue, o rei de Basã, residia.

  6. BASHAN (Heb. בָּשָׁן, הַבָּשָׁן), a region north of the Yarmuk River and east of the Jordan and lakes Ḥuleh and Kinneret. In biblical times, the city of *Salchah (Salcah) was at the eastern extremity of Bashan (Deut. 3:10; Josh. 13:11) and the city of Dan at its western (Deut. 33:22).

  7. Bashar Hafez al-Assad ‎ ( Damasco, 11 de setembro de 1965) é um político sírio e o atual presidente de seu país e Secretário Geral do Partido Baath desde 17 de julho de 2000. Sucedeu a seu pai, Hafez al-Assad, que governou a Síria por 30 anos até sua morte.