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Topic: Charles Clermont-Ganneau


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In the News (Wed 30 Dec 09)

  
 CLERMONT L'HERAULT - LoveToKnow Article on CLERMONT L'HERAULT
His son and successor, Charles Henri Jules, governor of Dauphin, was guillotined in July 1794, a fate which his grandson, Gaspard Charles, had suffered at Lyons in the previous year.
1349), called vicomte de Clermont, was granted the dignity of captain-general and first baron of Dauphin by his suzerain Humbert, dauphin of Vienois, in 1340; and in 1547 Clermont was made a county for Antoine (d.
CLERMONT L'HERAULT - LoveToKnow Article on CLERMONT L'HERAULT
11.1911encyclopedia.org /C/CL/CLERMONT_L_HERAULT.htm

  
 COUNTS OF CLERMONT - Online Information article about COUNTS OF CLERMONT
In 1524 the countship of Clermont was confiscated from the constable de Bourbon, and later (1540) given to the duke of Orleans, to Catherine de' Medici (1562), to Eric, duke of Brunswick (1569), from whom it passed to his brother-in-law Charles'of Lorraine (1596), and finally toHenry II., prince of Conde (1611).
Clermont is identified with the ancient Augustonemetum, the chief town of the Arverni, and it still preserves some remains of the Roman period.
Clermont was at one time the seat of a countship, the lords of which were already powerful in the 11th century.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /COR_CRE/COUNTS_OF_CLERMONT.html

  
 Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau ( February 19, 1846 - February 15, 1923), French Orientalist, the son of a sculptor of some repute, was born in Paris.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Charles_Simon_Clermont-Ganneau

  
 JewishEncyclopedia.com - JERUSALEM
Ḥayyim, Simon ha-Levi Innsburg of Frankfort, and Moses Najjarah of Damascus.
It seems probable that Simon, the high priest, using the permission to offer sacrifices, had the Temple repaired, a cistern dug, the wall for the Temple ("hekal melek") built, and the city fortified; for all of which he is praised by Ben Sira (Ecclus.
Simon held the upper and lower cities; John, the Temple and Ophel; and they did as much destruction from within as the Romans did from without ("B. J." ii.
www.jewishencyclopedia.com /view.jsp?artid=242&letter=J

  
 JewishEncyclopedia.com - ZEALOTS
Simon bar Giora and John of Giscala survived the fall of Jerusalem, and were taken as captives to Rome to glorify Titus' triumph; the former, with a rope around his head, was dragged to the Forum and cast down from the Tarpeian rock ("B. J." v.
But matters reached a climax under the procurators Cumanus, Felix, and Florus (49-64), who vied with one another in bloodthirsty cruelty and tyranny when the Zealot leaders, in their desperate struggle against the overwhelming power of an implacable enemy, resorted to extreme measures in order to force the people to action.
Most of the Zealots fell under the sword or other instruments of death and torture at the hands of the Romans, and such as fled to Alexandria or Cyrenaica roused by their unyielding hostility to Rome the opposition of those eager for peace, until they too finally met the same tragic fate ("B. J." vii.
www.jewishencyclopedia.com /view.jsp?artid=49&letter=Z

  
 The Return of Rebecca Brown M.D.
In 1873, French scholar Charles ClermontGanneau unearthed nearly 30 ossuaries southeast of Jerusalem.
Founder Charles Taze Russell’s pyramid monument at his gravesite in Pittsburgh’s Rosemont United Cemetery bears the image, a testimony to the Society’s former esteem of what it now calls pagan.
The small limestone burial boxes containing human bones were found at the Mount of Offense and bore Hebrew and Greek names.
www.pfo.org /jw&cross.htm

  
 Bibliography, References and Sources
The life and death of Carthage: a survey of Punic history and culture from its birth to its final tragedy, by Gilbert Charles Picard and Colette Picard; translated from the French by Dominique Collon.
Carthage : a survey of Punic history and culture from its birth to the final tragedy / by Gilbert Charles Picard and Colette Picard ; translated from the French by Dominique Collon.
The life and death of Carthage; a survey of Punic history and culture from its birth to the final tragedy, by Gilbert Charles Picard and Colette Picard.
phoenicia.org /bibliogr.html

  
 Archaeology - History
Charles Coüasnon, an architect licensed by the French government, who joined the Ecole to participating in the digs with Fr de Vaux, was entrusted with the direction of the works by the Franciscan Custodian of the Holy Land on behalf of the Latin community.
The probable date of the large tanks had been fixed round the year 200 B.C.; they would have been the work of the high priest Simon mentioned in Siracid 50, 3 (however this date is currently being revised).
They would have ceased to be used when Herod the Great dug the Birket Israïl, situated a little to the south, along the northern wall of the Temple esplanade.
ebaf.op.org /archeo/en/histo.html

  
 Jerusalem, 2 (International Standard Bible Encyclopedia) :: Bible Tools
Sir Charles Wilson (Golgotha and the Holy Sepulchre) suggests the probable explanation that the line of wall from the southwestern to the "Zion Gate" was determined by the legionary camp which stood on the part of the city now covered by the barracks and the Armenian quarter.
Sir Charles Watson (PEFS, 1906, 1907) has produced strong topographical and literary arguments for placing it where the al Aqsa mosque is today; other writers are more inclined to put it farther south, somewhere in the neighborhood of the massive tower discovered by Warren on the "Ophel" wall (see MILLO).
In 1864-65 a committee was formed in London to consider the sanitary condition of Jerusalem, especially with a view to furnishing the city with a satisfactory water-supply, and Lady Burdett-Coutts gave 500 pounds toward a proper survey of Jerusalem and its environs as a preliminary step.
bibletools.org /index.cfm/fuseaction/Def.show/RTD/ISBE/ID/4988

  
 The Survey of Western Palestine
Clermont Ganneau, which might serve to class this monument as even earlier than those already noticed.
North of Jerusalem is the.fine monument called generally the 'Tombs of the Kings.' Dr. Robinson has given reasons for supposing that this is the sepulcher of Helena, Queen of Adiabene, and of her sons.
The tomb of Simon the Just (fourth century B.C.) is shown by the Jews north of the city, but there is no evidence beyond tradition of its identity.
www.templemount.org /warren1.html

  
 CHARLES SIMON CLERMONT-GANNEAU - LoveToKnow Article on CHARLES SIMON CLERMONT-GANNEAU
To properly cite this CHARLES SIMON CLERMONT-GANNEAU article in your work, copy the complete reference below:
CHARLES SIMON CLERMONT-GANNEAU - LoveToKnow Article on CHARLES SIMON CLERMONT-GANNEAU
French Orientalist, the son of a sculptor of some repute, was born in Paris on the I9th of February 1846.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /C/CL/CLERMONT_GANNEAU_CHARLES_SIMON.htm

  
 The Book Gallery at antiqbook.com
V 1024 42 : COÜASNON CHARLES - The Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem: The Schweich Lectures of the British Academy 1972.
Kg 15 20 : DARWIN CHARLES / WILLIAMS JOSEPH W. On the Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs.
Ng 38 12 : DICKENS CHARLES - The Adventures of Oliver Twist and a Tale of two Cities: With 40 illustrations by George Cruikshank and Phiz.
www.antiqbook.com /boox/bkgall/books5000.shtml

  
 Jerusalem Burial Cave Reveals: Apostle Simon Peter buried in the Patriarchate of Jerusalem
Simon Bar-Jonah buried in the Patriarchate of Jerusalem.
The alleged “Bones of Peter” in Rome are not those of Simon Bar-Jona, but rather those of two men in their 50s (wrong age) a woman in her 70s (wrong gender) and several animals (wrong species).
Simeon the Prophet - (Luke 2 ~ Simeon is Greek for Simon).
www.freerepublic.com /focus/f-religion/1027410/posts

  
 Ron Answers His Opposition
We showed a sketch made by the Charles Clermont-Ganneau expedition that studied the cavern, but we could find no photographs.
Clermont-Ganneau, a French scholar, was the first to systematically research the cavern, and was sponsored by the Palestine Exploration Fund.
The etching of the cherub was found on the wall of one of the stone pillars in the general vicinity of the tunnel entrance.
www.pilgrimpromo.com /WAR/newsletters/1996_03/html/defense.htm

  
 Articles index started with ch
Charles Edward Louis John Casimir Silvester Severino Maria Stuart
Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History
Charles Emmanuel de Savoie, 3rd Duc de Nemours
www.kiwipedia.com /en/ch-index.html

  
 Science and Learning in France. 1917. Anthropology-Agriculture.
Charles CLERMONT-GANNEAU, professor of Semitic Epigraphy and Archaeology, a scholar deeply versed in the history and the monuments of Western Asia, author of "Archaeological Researches in Palestine during the years 1873-1874" (2 vols., 1896, 1899); "Mission en Palestine et en Phénicie entreprise en 1881" (1882); "Recueil d'archéologie orientale" (8 vols., 1888-1907).
Charles DIEHL, professor of Byzantine History, one of the most learned of modern Byzantinists.
His courses usually deal with Roman monuments and the interpretation of Latin inscriptions.
www.ku.edu /carrie/specoll/AFS/library/3-FF/SLF/prof1.html

  
 Lebanon -
Brownell, Charles M., 1872- They called me Chuckie ; tales of the transition of the western foothills of the greater wilderness, by Charles M. Brownell.
The life and death of Carthage: a survey of Punic history and culture from its birth to its final tragedy, by Gilbert Charles Picard and Colette Picard; translated from the French by Dominique Collon.
The life and death of Carthage; a survey of Punic history and culture from its birth to the final tragedy, by Gilbert Charles Picard and Colette Picard.
almashriq.hiof.no /general/000/010/011/phoenicia_biblio.html

  
 Publications - Revue Biblique 1998
The so-called "Jewish-Christian" tomb investigated by Thomas Chaplin and Charles Clermont-Ganneau in 1873 on the Mount of Offence, was in fact a typical Early Roman Jewish burial cave which was later reused in the Byzantine period for burial purposes as well.
The structure of the prologue of John (1:1-18) : a note
ebaf.op.org /publi/en/rb1998.html

  
 Commentary Magazine - Letters
...CHARLES H. WHITTIER Peirce Memorial Church Unitarian-Universalist Dover, New Hampshire MR...
...Put Milk Pfatdier-Permutit Pfizer (Charles) Phelps Dodge Philadelphia Electric Philadelphie Nat'l Bank PhilIp Morris...
...We might do better by stressing that, except for the Roman governor and his soldiery, everyone on both sides was a Jew-from the high priest to Simon of Arimethea...
www.commentarymagazine.com /Summaries/V39I3P12-1.htm

  
 Did Jesus die on a cross
In 1873, French scholar Charles Clermont-Ganneau unearthed nearly 30 ossuaries southeast of Jerusalem.
The heavy patibulum of the cross is tied across the shoulders, as the victim to be crucified walked the slow and humiliating journey along the Via Dolorosa.
There would be no reason to draw a cross if in fact it was not the instrument of crucifixion, there was no conspiracy to change the object he was impaled on.
www.letusreason.org /jw42.htm

  
 Talbot Correspondence Project: BIRCH Samuel to TALBOT William Henry Fox, 02 Oct 1871 [09810]
The first paper to be read is Ganneaus on the
www.foxtalbot.arts.gla.ac.uk /corresp/09810.asp?target=38

  
 jfh3.html
Earlier French archaeologist Charles Clermont- Ganneau had discovered similar materials at Bethany, a village close to Jerusalem.
Bagatti also found evidence which clearly indicated that the tomb was in use in the early part of the first century A.D. Inside, the sign of the cross was found on numerous first century coffins.
Clearly no mythical figure could have produced such an effect upon those who were living in Jerusalem and the surrounding area in the same period that Jesus was upon earth, and who had every opportunity to examine the facts at first-hand.
www.angelfire.com /80s/rjdb/jfh3.html

  
 Usenet Archive
It seems the only reason >>>>Clermont Ganneau did not candidly state his beliefs was the question of a >>>>married clergy, for throughout his article he suggests this Simeon to have >>>>been the Bishop of Jerusalem.
Concerning them writes Clermont Ganneau: "By singular coincidence, >>>>which from the first struck me very forcibly, these inscriptions, found >>>>close to the Bethany road, and very near the site of the village, contain >>>>nearly all the names of the personages in the Gospel scene which belonged to >>>>the place; Eleazar (Lazarus), Simon, Martha.
There seems to be evidence that such was the >>>>case; in 1873 M. Clermont Ganneau discovered near Bethany on the Mount of >>>>Offense certain sarcephagi of extremely ancient times.
usenet.best-buy-online.com /Dir25/File358.html

  
 Category:1911 Britannica - What-Means.com
Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond and Lennox
Conversations-Lexikon mit vorzüglicher Rücksicht auf die gegenwärtigen Zeiten
www.what-means.com /encyclopedia/Category:1911_Britannica

  
 February 15 - Today in Science History
James Frank Duryea and his brother Charles Duryea invented the first automobile that was actually built and operated in the United States.
Hans Karl August Simon von Euler-Chelpin, a German-born Swedish biochemist, shared the 1929 Nobel Prize for Chemistry with Sir Arthur Harden for work on the role of enzymes in the alcoholic fermentation of sugar.
In 1904 important work by Arthur Harden had shown that enzymes contain an easily removable nonprotein part, a coenzyme.
www.todayinsci.com /2/2_15.htm

  
 GODSAIDMANSAID.COM - THE DEAD SPEAK
Some of the very famous work of world-renowned French archaeologist Charles Clermont-Ganneau, who discovered the legendary Moabite Stone, was cited in Jeffrey’s research.
Clermont-Ganneau reported startling discoveries in his 1874 Palestine Exploration Fund report.
The presence of the names of Jesus, written with its common contraction, and Martha, of which we only know historically that it was the feminine form of the Aramaic, would alone be sufficient to make this collection important for an exegetic point of view.
www.godsaidmansaid.com /printtopic.asp?ItemId=785

  
 encyc09.txt
Even after the final success of the Protestants in 1552, he remained in undisturbed possession of his see, thanks to his popularity and moderation; and after the abdication of Charles V., he urged the best interests of Germany in his Oratio de ordinanda republica Germaniæ (Cologne, 1562).
_________________________________________________________________ PFENDER, pfen´der or [F.] fan´´dār´, CHARLES LEBERECHT: French Lutheran; b.
It was rather the high-priestly families that offset the rest of the priesthood in the manner of a distinctive aristocracy.
www.ccel.org /s/schaff/encyc09/cache/encyc09.txt

  
 Phoenician Sports Founded Olympic Games and the Stadium of Amrit
Clermont-Ganneau, Charles: Mission en Palestine et en Phénicie entreprise en 1881 - 5o rapport, p.
www.phoenicia.org /phoenicianolympics.htm

  
 Jerusalem
With regard to the meaning of the original name there is no concurrence of opinion.
dhōshāh, “Jerusalem the holy” is inscribed on Simon's coins.
holycall.com /biblemaps/jerusalem.htm

  
 Residenzen-Kommission der Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen
Kohler, Charles, Documents relatifs à Guillaume d'Adam archevêque de Sultanieh puis d'Antivari et à son entourage (1318-1346), in: ROL 10 (1903-1904), S.15-56 (auch in: Mélanges pour servir à l'histoire de l'orient latin et des croisades, Bd.
Schefer, Charles (Hg.), Le Voyage de la saincte cyté de Hierusalem (=Recueil de voyages et de documents pour servir à l'histoire de la géographie depuis le XIII jusqu' à la fin du XVI siècle, II), Paris, Ern.
Breviloquium peregrinationis et mansionum XLII quae in deserto hujus saeculi nequam habuit Thomas, in: Thomas Basin, Histoire des règnes de Charles VII et de Louis XI, hrg.
resikom.adw-goettingen.gwdg.de /franzlit.htm

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