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Topic: 33rd century BCE


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  Encyclopedia: 4th millennium BCE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
City of Ur in Mesopotamia ( 40th century BC).
Beginning of desertification of Sahara ( 35th century BC).
The Maya calendar dates the creation of the Earth to August 11 or August 13, 3114 BC (establishing that date as day zero of the Long Count 13.0.0.0.0).
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/4th-millennium-BCE   (396 words)

  
 Other Special Days.
It is not clear whether the date of mourning changed because of the two events of the second century, or whether it was due to the influence of an earlier seven-day festival from the 9th to the 15th of Av as Schauss suggests.
Whatever the reason, at least from the third century onward the day was observed on the 9th except when that was a Saturday, in which case it was observed on the 10th.
Centuries later this previous agricultural festival was observed by eating fifteen types of fruit.
www.rigal.freeserve.co.uk /jewish/other%20days/otherdays.htm   (2542 words)

  
 A Rebuttal to Licona's "Refutation"
As they observed the influence of the heavenly bodies, and especially the significance of the sun in ruling the seasons and determining the crops, they presumed that the power that ordered human life resided in the heavens and that its message might be read there.
As astrology moved from Babylonia to Greece in the 4th century BC, it was enthusiastically adopted and combined with the already existing religious system of anthropomorphic polytheism and the rapidly developing science of astronomy.
As concerns Buddha and the similarities I outline in both The Christ Conspiracy and Suns of God, it is interesting that, if one reads the correspondence provided by Licona at the bottom of his "refutation," some of his contentions in the body of his diatribe are themselves refuted, especially in the case of Krishna.
www.truthbeknown.com /licona.htm   (7068 words)

  
 Glossary of Theological Terms
The term "Confessionalism" is often used to refer to the hardening of religious attitudes in the later sixteenth century, as the Lutheran and Reformed churches became involved in a struggle for power, especially in Germany.
A term used, especially during the nineteenth century, to refer to the real historical person of Jesus of Nazareth, as opposed to the Christian interpretation of that person, especially as presented in the New Testament and the creeds.
A Greek term, literally meaning "of the same substance," which came to be used extensively during the fourth century to designate the mainstream Christological belief that Jesus Christ was "of the same substance as God." The term was polemical, being directed against the Arian view that Christ was "of similar substance" (homoiousion) to God.
www.biblicist.org /bible/terms.htm   (12042 words)

  
 33rd century BC   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
33rd century BC 33rd century BC (Redirected from 33rd century BCE)
( 34th century BC - 33rd century BC - 32nd century BC - other centuries)
- The next article in the enyclopedia is 31st century BCE.
www.arikah.com /encyclopedia/33rd_century_BCE   (105 words)

  
 [No title]
Due to calendrical uncertainties which arose in Second Temple times (6th century BCE to 1st century CE), each festival is celebrated for an additional day in the Diaspora.
Pesah commemorates the Exodus from Egypt and the servitude that preceded it.
During the 19th century the demand for the reform of Jewish life--principally the liturgy of the synagogue, but many other aspects as well--evoked a series of rabbinical conferences and synods that debated the questions and sought to guide the changes thought to be necessary.
cyberspacei.com /jesusi/inlight/religion/judaism/jud3_3.htm   (9267 words)

  
 Glossary of Hebraic Terms
century CE, this title began to be used to designate a sect of European Jews.
Over many centuries they established a variety of rules with which they protected the correct text.
Midrash pl. Midrashim - A collection of works compiled between the third and twelfth centuries that seeks out underlying truths and meanings of the Bible; the result of the process of delving into the ramifications of a biblical verse and of the ancient rabbis' reading between the lines of Scripture.
www.templesanjose.org /JudaismInfo/history/Glossary_of_Hebraic_Terms.htm   (10521 words)

  
 Who was the real Jesus?
The Christian groups of the 1st century CE held extremely diverse theological views, and this would be hard to explain if they were the followers of a single, recent teacher.
G.R.S. Mead shows that the 100 BCE date is part of the oldest deposit of the Talmud and predates the stories containing the later date, which were developed by the Lydda (or Lud) school of rabbis for polemical purposes [8].
In the 4th century the Christian saint Epiphanius gave a Christian genealogy in which Panthera is mentioned as the grandfather of Jesus.
ourworld.compuserve.com /homepages/dp5/jesus.htm   (5034 words)

  
 Planet-F1 forum: Planet-F1 Chat => the what year did the 21st century start thread
It may be convenient for you to suggest that the 80s is 1980 to 1989 but in fact the first year is only the 79th in YOUR system IF you still say that 2001 is the start of the new Millenium.
By your reckoning, with the year 1900 as the first year of the 20th century, 1980 is the 81st year of the century.
the 21st century of "years including one before the common era" started in 2000, but this is a pointless notion.
forum.planet-f1.com /index.php?t=msg&goto=519892&   (8116 words)

  
 VRC CATALOGUING GUIDE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The LG is the professor's initials; 94 is the year the slide was shot;.033 means it was the 33rd book we shot for Larry Goedde in 1994; the.01 means that it is the first slide we catalogued in the batch of slides.
If the only date on a work is 2nd half of the 16th century, enter 1550-1600 in date field and 16 in the century field.
Century should be abbreviated as C. For example: 4th C. (note no period between BC), or 18th C. Line 5 Should be other data needed.
www.virginia.edu /art/VRC/VRC_Cataloguing_Guide.html   (3969 words)

  
 [1999: July] Re: Synagogue Singing
One does not have to be knowledgeable to realize that a Greek translation made in the 2nd century BCE would follow the original Hebrew melodies not 'pagan' Alexandrian Greek ones.
All four are among the oldest of the Psalms of the Hebrew Psalter: the 29th and 96th being pre-monarchial; the 23rd and 33rd being Davidic.
Because of my training, it was then possible to state what the original names had been, verify that the main body of the text was indeed a copy of an 8th century document, and then show that the grant holder and site names in the text were forgeries, and how the forgery had been done.
omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu /mailing_lists/LT-ANTIQ/1999/07/0037.php   (1088 words)

  
 Restoration Records   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The Hebrew word for a sacrificial offering, taken from the word karav and the idea of "drawing near." This was a popular word in the first century when many were abusing the gifts of God by using the phrase "It is corban," referring to money which was not a gift to the Temple (Mark 7:11).
century A.D., this title began to be used to designate a sect of European Jews.
A group of scholars whose purpose was to safeguard the integrity of the biblical text and facilitate its study.
www.restorationrecords.com /hebrewglossary.html   (8751 words)

  
 Yuan (family name)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
In terms of population, it is ranked 33rd in the world.
It is known that the surname Yuan could be written in at least five different ways in Han times (袁 and 爰 being the most common), and they may have been used interchangeably in pre-Hantimes.
In any case, prior to the unification of China, the concentration of the Yuan clan was in the limited territory of Chen,even after its conquest by the state of Chu in the sixth century.
www.therfcc.org /RFCC/yuan-family-name--222692.html   (2052 words)

  
 glossary
The Haggadah was composed in the 7th century out of biblical passages, midrashim, fragments of Halakhah and prayers.
The laws that refer to the types of food and drink which are permitted to eat, or to the manner of preparation required to render food kasher and thus suitable to eat.
Lag ba-Omer a holiday on the 33rd day of the days of the Omer, the 33rd day that a sheaf of barley was brought to the Temple.
www.geocities.com /orthodox_conversion_to_judaism/glossary.html   (5922 words)

  
 Hebrew Glossary   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Boethuseans - A religious party of the first century composed of wealthy and influential members of the priesthood, similar in doctrine with the Sadducees.
Hillel - The most prominent Jewish teacher of the first century (30 BCE - 10 CE).
Rabbi Nehemiah, second century, began the work; in the third century it was continued by Hiyya ben Abba and Oshaiah.
www.thechristmyth.com /hebrew_glossary.htm   (8461 words)

  
 seattle.indymedia.org
A 33rd degree Mason, he was one of the founding fathers, and head of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, being the Grand Commander of North American Freemasonry from 1859-1891.
Palladism had been brought to Greece from Egypt by Pythagoras in the fifth century, and it was this cult of Satan that was introduced to the inner circle of the Masonic lodges.
Long apparently chose Charleston because it was geographically located on the 33rd parallel of latitude (incidentally, so is Baghdad), and this council is considered to be the Mother Supreme Council of all Masonic Lodges of the World.
seattle.indymedia.org /en/2005/07/247116.shtml   (2451 words)

  
 Egypt
While Aristeas’ numbers are likely exaggerated, various papyri, inscriptions and ostraca from the third century BCE nonetheless testify to the presence of substantial Jewish populations in all parts of Egypt.
By the first century CE, they were clearly established throughout Egypt.
The synagogues also appear to have been quite large in size: a land survey in Arsinoë-Crocodilopolis from the first century BCE records that a synagogue on the outskirts of the city occupied two-and-a-half acres of land.
www.pohick.org /sts/egypt.html   (755 words)

  
 Iraq
After the later collapse of the Sumerian civilization, the people were reunited in 1700 BCE by King Hammurabi of Babylon (1792-1750 BCE), and the country flourished under the name of Babylonia.
In the 6th century BCE (586 BCE), Nebuchadnezzar II conquered Judea (Judah), destroyed Jerusalem; Solomon's Temple was also destroyed; Nebuchadnezzar carried away an estimated 15,000 captives, and sent most of its population into exile in Babylonia.
In the second century BCE, it became part of the Persian Empire, remaining thus until the 7th century CE, when Arab Muslims captured it.
www.websters-online-dictionary.org /Ir/Iraq.html   (8997 words)

  
 The Number 33: facts   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The Vatican recognizes "33 Doctors of the Church." Pope John Paul II proclaimed St. Theresa of Lisieux Doctor of the Church; she became the 33rd person, and the third woman, to be honoured with this title.
It reached its peak in the 16th Century as it battled the Reformation; its most famous trial was that of Galileo in 1633.
Around 2100-2000 BCE, a circle about 108 feet (33 metres) in diameter comprised originally of 30 upright sandstone blocks (known today as sarsens), was constructed in the centre of the original circular bank-and-ditch.
home.earthlink.net /~acb_33/33facts1.html   (6272 words)

  
 33rd Regiment of Foot Definition / 33rd Regiment of Foot Research   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
33rd Regiment of Foot Definition / 33rd Regiment of Foot Research
The 33rd Regiment of Foot was a regiment of the British Army.
Originally formed in 1702 as the Earl of Huntingdon's Regiment of Foot, (during that period of history regiment's were known by the names of the Colonel of the regiment).
www.elresearch.com /33rd_Regiment_of_Foot   (329 words)

  
 Corporate Site: Great Inventions
Venerated as a philosopher by Confucianists and as a saint or god by some of the common people and was worshiped as an imperial ancestor during the T’ang dynasty.
Margaret (Higgins) Sanger (14 Sep 1879, Corning NY—6 Sep 1966, Tucson AZ), American founder of the birth-control movement in the US and an international leader in the field; she is credited with originating the term birth control.
One of the great negotiators of the 20th century and a master of policy implementation, with infinite capacity for details.
corporate.britannica.com /press/leaders.html   (9293 words)

  
 cars - User:Eric Forste   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
All three periods end suddenly and simultaneously at the end of the Younger Dryas in the 10th millennium BCE.
Bronze Age : from 33rd century BCE (in Near East, starts later elsewhere) to 10th century BCE
Thus the Anatolian Iron Age starts around the 13th or 12th century BCE but the Chinese Iron Age starts a few centuries later.
www.carluvers.com /cars/User:Eric_Forste   (646 words)

  
 Chaplain's Corner   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
*It was during the weeks of Sefirah in the second century BCE that the disciples of Rabbi Akiva suffered from a devestating plague.
No weddings are held except for the first days of Hebrew months (Rosh Hodesh) and the 33rd day of Sefirah (Lag B'Omer), when tradition states that the ancient plague was stayed.
Composed by Rabbie Ben Meir ben Isaac Nehorai toward the end of the 11th Century BCE, this poem extols God who gave the Torah to Israel and has prepared a wondrous future for the pure and upright in the world to come as a reward for observing the teachings of the Torah.
www.dcmilitary.com /navy/seaservices/9_19/commentary/29024-1.html   (915 words)

  
 Why We Do the Things We Do   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
In the nineteenth century, as Reform Judaism emerged, leaders of the Reform movement criticized Kashrut as an archaic ritual.
But beyond this is the comfort of honoring the dead in the same space where we will remember them in our prayers—the same space in which we welcome our babies, converts, and bnai mitzvah, and observe all the rhythms of joy and sadness in the Jewish cycle of time.
During the past half century, some Jews have questioned whether it is still appropriate to mark Tisha B’Av with such profound mourning.
in013.urj.net /why.htm   (6829 words)

  
 Glossary: Messianic Judaism
Means the 33rd day of the Omer since in jewish mysticism the sum letter totals of "lamud" and "gimmel" in 'Lag' equal 33.
Somewhat dubious history with pagan origins; first Jewish use was in 13th century Prague and later adopted by Zionist mov't in the 19th century.
Second century sages felt this was too expensive a dye to use, so they waived the biblical requirement, lest people use a cheaper dye instead and break the oral law.
www.lightofmashiach.org /glossary.html   (4613 words)

  
 Dictionary of Meaning www.mauspfeil.net   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The climate is generally dry and mild, but with the exception of Naxos the soil is not very fertile: agricultural produce includes wine, fruit, wheat, olive oil, and tobacco.
A distinctive Neolithic culture almalgating Anatolian and mainland Greek elements arose in the western Aegean before 4000 BCE, based on emmer wheat and wild-type barley, sheep and goats, pigs, and tuna that were apparently speared from small boats (Rutter).
Early Cycladic culture evolved in three phases, between ''ca'' 33rd century BCE 3300 - 20th century BCE 2000 BCE, when it was increasingly swamped in the rising influence of Minoan Crete.
www.mauspfeil.net /Cyclades.html   (908 words)

  
 *Ø*  Wilson's Almanac free daily ezine | Book of Days | April 12 | Easter Monday Biddenden cakes Chulkhurst Ceres ...
Beer also used to be distributed until the seventeenth century but the bread, cheese and cakes are still allocated.
As well as the picture of the sisters on the cakes their names appear, and on the apron of one is written the number 34 — the age at which Elisa and Mary died.
The endowment comes from the earnings of an estate known as the Bread and Cheese lands, which, according to the best authorities, were some centuries ago left to the parish for this purpose by the Chulkhurst sisters (some sources give their surname as Preston).
www.wilsonsalmanac.com /book/apr12.html   (4144 words)

  
 Masonic references in 20th century literature
He gains admission to a meeting in London with a triple knock and a sign, where he meets two "Freemasons of the 33rd Degree." Later the Templars are identified with the Illuminati.
Set in the 25th century, the two references to Freemasonry are gratuitous and irrelevant to the story, occuring in a single scene with a character who only appears once.
George Washington and Mozart 's masonic connects are referenced; and a Freemason Liberation Front or "Masonista", a local politico-religious group, attempts both armed and passive resistance.
www.freemasonry.bcy.ca /fiction/20.html   (4288 words)

  
 *Ø*  Wilson's Almanac free daily ezine | Book of Days | January 22 | Lord Timothy Dexter eccentric Francis Bacon ...
The sixth-century BCE Greek historian Hecateus wrote that an unnamed island we today can clearly identify as Britain, was inhabited by the Hyperboreans who “venerate Apollo more than any other god” and that Apollo returned to the island every nineteen years, to much celebration.
Hecateus did not know it but he was describing the 19-year lunar metonic cycle which was unknown to Greek scholars until a century after the historian wrote.
United Kingdom in the 18th century, but was ceded to the UK in 1783.
www.wilsonsalmanac.com /book/jan22.html   (4371 words)

  
 Dovka
Several thousand years before the canal was dug across the isthmus in the mid 19th century, a paved road existed and ships were pulled across on sleds, from one sea to another.
Following a boisterous sail east from Aegina we were in an idyllic anchorage under the temple of Poseidon on the summit of Cape Sounion.
It is quite a sight to look up at anytime and see the 5th century BCE, temple of Poseidon, god of the sea, rising 60 meters above the sea.
www.dovka.com /logs2.htm   (2879 words)

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