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Hebron Presbyterian Church, also known as Sutton's Branch Church, is a historic Presbyterian church and national historic district located near Beautancus, Duplin County, North Carolina. The district encompasses one contributing building and one contributing site.
In 164 BCE, Hebron was conquered by Judas Maccabeus who destroyed the city and its fortifications. [13] In 112 BCE, the Hasmonean prince John Hyrcanus I waged war against the Edomites, who were given the choice of expulsion or conversion. Thus, Hebron became a Jewish city, with a population that included former Edomites.
Hebron Methodist Church is a historic Methodist church located near Oakville, Warren County, North Carolina. It was built about 1848–1849, and is a one-story, three bay by three bay, Greek Revival style frame church. It has a gable roof and rests on a stone foundation. It was enlarged in 1886.
The Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ of the Apostolic Faith (COOLJC)is a Oneness Pentecostal denomination with headquarters in Manhattan. It was founded in 1919 by Robert C. Lawson . According to the Association of Religion Data Archives in 2020, the denomination had 85,938 members in 527 churches.
The man instrumental in rebuilding the synagogue was local Hebron resident Ben Zion Tavger. [12] [13] He was a prominent physicist in the Soviet Union at Gorky University noted for his work in the Magnetic Symmetry phenomenon. He moved to Israel in 1972 and became a chair at Tel Aviv University. [14] [15]
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The Israelite Church of God in Jesus Christ (ICGJC), formerly known as the Israeli Church of Universal Practical Knowledge, is an American organization of Black Hebrew Israelites. [1] Its headquarters are in New York City and in 2008 had churches in cities in 10 U.S. states.
Khirbet Nimra, an archaeological site next to Hebron and 2,5 km north of Ramat el-Khalil, identified as the Persian- and Hellenistic-period Mamre. [ 10 ] Ramat el-Khalil , also spelled Ramet el-Khulil, is the site identified as Mamre in the time of King Herod (1st century BCE), Constantine the Great (4th century CE), and – strongly contested ...