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  2. Ezekiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ezekiel

    During the exile, the monarchy and state were annihilated, and political and national life were no longer possible. In the absence of a worldly foundation, it became necessary to build a spiritual one and Ezekiel performed this mission by observing the signs of the time and deducing his doctrines from them.

  3. Jewish diaspora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_diaspora

    The Jewish diaspora (Hebrew: גוֹלָה, romanized: gōlā), dispersion (Hebrew: תְּפוּצָה, romanized: təfūṣā) or exile (Galuth, Hebrew: גָּלוּת gālūṯ; Yiddish: גלות, romanized: goles) [a] is the dispersion of Israelites or Jews out of their ancient ancestral homeland (the Land of Israel) and their subsequent ...

  4. Exile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exile

    Exile is an early motif in ancient Greek tragedy. In the ancient Greek world, this was seen as a fate worse than death. In the ancient Greek world, this was seen as a fate worse than death. The motif reaches its peak on the play Medea , written by Euripides in the fifth century BC, and rooted in the very old oral traditions of Greek mythology.

  5. Psalm 137 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psalm_137

    In the slightly different numbering system used in the Greek Septuagint and Latin Vulgate translations of the Bible, this psalm is Psalm 136. In Latin, it is known by the incipit, "Super flumina Babylonis ". [1] The psalm is a communal lament about remembering Zion, and yearning for Jerusalem while dwelling in exile during the Babylonian captivity.

  6. Book of Ezekiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Ezekiel

    The Book of Ezekiel is the third of the Latter Prophets in the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) and one of the major prophetic books in the Christian Bible, where it follows Isaiah and Jeremiah. [1] According to the book itself, it records six visions of the prophet Ezekiel , exiled in Babylon, during the 22 years from 593 to 571 BC.

  7. Daniel (biblical figure) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_(biblical_figure)

    The Greek text of Daniel contains three additional tales, two of which feature Daniel (the third is an expansion of the tale of the fiery furnace). The tale of Susanna tells how Daniel saves the reputation of a young Jewish married woman when two lecherous Jewish elders condemn her to death, supposedly for unchastity, but actually because she ...

  8. Land of Israel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_of_Israel

    Nonetheless, during two millennia of exile and with a continuous yet small Jewish presence in the land, a strong sense of bondedness exists throughout this tradition, expressed in terms of people-hood; from the very beginning, this concept was identified with that ancestral biblical land or, to use the traditional religious and modern Hebrew ...

  9. Mordecai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mordecai

    Biblical scholar Michael D. Coogan discusses this as an inaccuracy regarding Mordecai's age. [16] [17] If "who had been carried into exile" refers to Mordecai, he would have had been more than 100 years old during the events described in the Book of Esther (assuming the biblical Ahasuerus is indeed Xerxes I). [16]