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Temple In Rabbinical Literature: Holy of Holies of the Temple at Jerusalem. Mount Moriah, on which the Temple was erected, is known by tradition as the spot where Adam was born and where he built an altar to God; where Cain and Abel offered ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [100%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
Rabbinic Literature: Rabbinic literature, in the broadest sense, can mean the entire spectrum of Judaism's rabbinic writings throughout history. However, the term is often used as an exact translation of the Hebrew phrase Sifrut Hazal (ספרות חז"ל; "Literature [of our] Sages, [of] blessed ... [98%] 2023-02-03
Rabbinic literature: Rabbinic literature, in its broadest sense, is the entire spectrum of rabbinic writings throughout Jewish history. However, the term often refers specifically to literature from the Talmudic era, as opposed to medieval and modern rabbinic writing, and thus corresponds with ... (Jewish literature attributed to rabbis) [98%] 2023-11-02 [Rabbinic literature] [Ancient Hebrew texts]...
Incense offering in rabbinic literature: The incense offering (Hebrew: קְטֹרֶת, romanized: ketoret), a blend of aromatic substances that exhale perfume during combustion, usually consisting of spices and gums burnt as an act of worship, occupied a prominent position in the sacrificial legislation of the ancient Hebrews ... (Rabbinic views on the incense formula used in Jewish ritual) [78%] 2023-11-22 [Jewish sacrificial law] [Incense]...
Baruch (given name): Baruch (Hebrew: בָּרוּךְ, Modern: Barūḵ, Tiberian: Bārūḵ, "Blessed", Polish: Berek) is a masculine name among Jews used from Biblical times to the present, which is sometimes used as surname. It is also found, though more rarely, among Christians—particularly among Protestants who use ... (Given name) [78%] 2023-08-25 [Given names]
Baruch: Polish mechanic of the beginning of the eighteenth century; lived in Pogrebishche. He produced two magnificent brass candelabra for the synagogue there, which are still extant. One of them was intended for the Ḥanukkah festival, and has the traditional form ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [78%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
Baruch: BARUCH ba'-ruk, bar'-uk (baruk; Barouch, "blessed"): (1) Son of Neriah and brother of Seraiah, King Zedekiah's chamberlain (Jeremiah 51:59). He was the devoted friend (Jeremiah 32:12), the amanuensis (36:4,32) and faithful attendant (36 ... [78%] 1915-01-01
Baruch: "Blessed." The secretary of the prophet Jeremiah. [78%] 2014-03-15
Baruch: A Jewish pioneer settler in Spain, whom the tradition of the Ibn Albaliahs regarded as the ancestor of their family. See Ibn Daud, "Sefer ha-Ḳabbalah," in Neubauer's "Medieval Jewish Chronicles," i. (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [78%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
Baruch: Libro de Baruc Una antigua edición de la Biblia. El Libro de Baruc (también llamado de Baruk o Baruch) es un libro deuterocanónico perteneciente al canon bíblico de la Iglesia católica que se encuentra en el Antiguo Testamento, perteneciente al ... [78%] 2023-06-01
Baruch: Son of Zabbai or Zaccai, who took part in strengthening the wall of Jerusalem in the time of Nehemiah (Neh. A priest who signed the covenant with Nehemiah (Neh. A Judahite whose son Maaseiah was a resident of Jerusalem (Neh. (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [78%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
Rabbinical Assembly: The Rabbinical Assembly (RA) is the international association of Conservative rabbis. The RA was founded in 1901 to shape the ideology, programs, and practices of the Conservative movement. (International association of Conservative rabbis) [67%] 2023-11-09 [Conservative Judaism in the United States] [Conservative rabbis]...
Rabbinical Court (Israel): The Rabbinical courts are part of the Israeli legal system, which operates religious courts in parallel to the civil court system. The system, inherited from the previous British mandate system, grants religious courts jurisdiction over personal status matters such as ... (Israel) [67%] 2023-11-28 [Jewish courts and civil law] [Orthodox Judaism in Israel]...
Authority, Rabbinical: The power or right of deciding the Law, in dubious cases, or of interpreting, modifying, or amplifying, and occasionally of abrogating it, as vested in the Rabbis as its teachers and expounders. In Biblical times the Law was chiefly in ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [67%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
Conferences, Rabbinical: Assemblies of rabbis to determine common courses of action or common principles of faith. Rabbinical conferences are a late phenomenon in the history of Judaism, dating, as they do, only from the fourth decade of the nineteenth century. There had ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [67%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
Literature: Literature (from the Latin Littera meaning 'letters' and referring to an acquaintance with the written word) is the written work of a specific culture, sub-culture, religion, philosophy or the study of such written work which may appear in poetry ... [67%] 2009-09-02
Literature: Literature, a general term which, in default of precise definition, may stand for the best expression of the best thought reduced to writing. Its various forms are the result of race peculiarities, or of diverse individual temperaments, or of political ... [67%] 2022-09-02
Literature: In its modern descriptive sense, literature denotes written texts; by extension scholars have also applied the term to spoken or sung texts ("oral literature"), writings in particular subject areas ("medical literature"), other collections of material in a given language or ... [67%] 2023-07-30
Literature: Literature refers to written works, especially such forms as poetry, novels, novellas, plays, epistles, epic poems, graphic novels, haiku, speeches and letters. These may range from the speeches of Cicero and Martin Luther King Jr. [67%] 2023-12-14 [Books]