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Displaying: agr - con

  • Agriculture (Image) This result contains an image

    Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East

  • Agriculture (Image) This result contains an image

    Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East

  • Agriculture (Image) This result contains an image

    Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East

  • agriculture (A-Z entry)

    From Genesis ( 2: 15 ) to Revelation ( 14: 14–20 ) the Bible is dominated by farmers and their endless labour as they ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Agriculture (A-Z entry)

    The landscape of the Judean Desert consists of four mountainous escarpments descending to the east. The uppermost and lowest escarpments are composed of hard ...

    Source: Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls

  • Agriculture (A-Z entry)

    In the Bible agriculture and religion are intimately connected. Of the three major festivals two were clearly connected with the agricultural year. The Feast ...

    Source: The Oxford Companion to the Bible

  • Agriculture (A-Z entry) This result contains an image

    The broad array of activities and knowledge whereby human communities exploit plants to produce food and other crops (fibers and oils), agriculture, literally means ...

    Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East

  • amanuensis (A-Z entry)

    Latin for a secretary. Paul dictated letters to Tertius ( Rom. 16: 22 ), who wrote on his behalf. It is sometimes held that ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • ambassadors (A-Z entry)

    ‘Servants’ (AV, NRSV), ‘envoys’ (REB), ‘an embassy’ (NJB) sent on a goodwill visit to another country ( 1 Kgs. 5: 1 ) or to ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • ʾamoraʾ (A-Z entry)

    (Aram. “speaker”; pl. ʾamora ʾ im ) a rabbinic teacher of the talmudic period. The name is used in both Babylonia and the ...

    Source: Oxford Biblical Studies Online

  • Animal Husbandry (A-Z entry)

    The domestication of animals is a component of the “Neolithic Revolution” and a process that had an impact both on the biology of the ...

    Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East

  • Apelles (A-Z entry)

    Warmly greeted by Paul in Rom. 16: 10 . It is known to be a name borne by members of Caesar 's domestic staff; ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Aristeas (A-Z entry)

    The fictitious name given to the Jewish author of a letter of unknown date purporting to describe how the Septuagint ( LXX ) was ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • asiarchs (A-Z entry)

    Officials (NRSV) in the Roman province of Asia. They were well disposed towards Paul at Ephesus ( Acts 19: 31 —‘dignitaries of the province’, ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Augustan cohort (A-Z entry)

    A cohort consisted of 600 soldiers, and to bear the name of an emperor was an honour.

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • baker (A-Z entry)

    Pharaoh 's chief baker was an important official ( Gen. 40 ), and bakers' shops were a necessary part of city life ( Jer. ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • Baruch, Book of (A-Z entry)

    The book is named for Baruch, the son of Neriah and scribe of the prophet Jeremiah ( see Jer 32:12 ; 36:4 ). The ...

    Source: Oxford Encyclopedia of the Bible

  • beggar (A-Z entry)

    Illness or some physical disability such as blindness and lameness made it impossible to earn a living; recourse to people's charity was the only ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • carpenter (A-Z entry)

    Worker in timber. Carpenters from abroad were employed in the building of Solomon 's Temple ( 1 Kgs. 5: 6 ) but by the ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

  • concubine (A-Z entry)

    A secondary wife on whom Hebrew law conferred certain minimal rights ( Deut. 21: 15–17 ). Sarah and Rachel gave their handmaidens to their ...

    Source: A Dictionary of the Bible

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