253 relations: Abraham Abulafia, Afghana, Afridi, Ahmadiyya, Ahmadiyya and other faiths, Aliyah, Amotz Asa-El, Antisemitism in Japan, Antisemitism in the United States, Antonio de Montezinos, Armstrongism, Asahel Grant, Assyria and Germany in Anglo-Israelism, Assyrian captivity, Bani Isra'il, Baudolino, Behistun Inscription, Bene Ephraim, Bene Israel, Beowulf (DC Comics), Beta Israel, Black Hebrew Israelites, Bloodletting in Mesoamerica, Bnei Menashe, Bo (parsha), Book of Ballymote, Book of Mormon, British Israelism, British-Israel-World Federation, Bukharan Jews, C. A. L. Totten, Caratacus, Charles Fox Parham, Charles Ottley Groom Napier, Chatata, Christian Identity, Christian messianic prophecies, Christian terrorism, Circumcision controversies, Commandment Keepers, Conquistador, CRC Churches International, Criticism of the Bible, Daniel Juslenius, Daniel Sabin Butrick, David Horowitz (author), Davidic line, De Montesinos, Demetrius the Chronographer, Demographics of Israel, ..., Demographics of Tajikistan, Denis Michael Rohan, Deportation, Dispensation (period), Edward Brerewood, Edward King, Viscount Kingsborough, Eldad ha-Dani, Elijah of Ferrara, Eric Rudolph, Ethan Smith (clergyman), Ethiopian Jews in Israel, Ethnic groups in Afghanistan, Expulsions and exoduses of Jews, Foreign relations of Israel, Frank Sandford, French Israelism, Garner Ted Armstrong, Gates of Alexander, Gathering (LDS Church), Ghana–Israel relations, Gog and Magog, Grace Communion International, Groups claiming affiliation with Israelites, Harriet Livermore, Hata clan, Helene Koppejan, Henry Wentworth Monk, Herbert W. Armstrong, Hezekiah, Hill of Tara, Hillel Halkin, Hinduism and Judaism, History of Israel, History of Palestine, History of the Jews and Judaism in the Land of Israel, History of the Jews in Africa, History of the Jews in China, History of the Jews in India, History of the Jews in Iran, History of the Jews in Kairouan, History of the Jews in Saudi Arabia, History of the Marranos in England, I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream (video game), Index of articles related to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, India–Israel relations, Israeli Jews, Israelis, J. H. Allen, James Owen Dorsey, Japanese-Jewish common ancestry theory, Jean-Frédéric Waldeck, Jeroboam's Revolt, Jesus in Ahmadiyya Islam, Jesus in India (book), Jewish ethnic divisions, Jewish history, Jewish mysticism, Jews, Jews of Bilad el-Sudan, John Campanius, John Dury, John Howard Payne, John Michell (writer), Joseph Wolff, Josiah Priest, Juan Galindo, Judah ben Shalom, Judaism and Mormonism, Judaizers, Juji Nakada, Kashmiris, Khazar Correspondence, Khazars, Khuplam Milui Lenthang, Kingdom of David, Kingdom of Israel (Samaria), Kuki people, La Ciudad Blanca, Lake of No Return, LaPorte Church of Christ, Lemba people, Lewis H. Morgan, List of Christian movements, List of Digging for the Truth episodes, List of Mormon folk beliefs, List of organizations designated by the Southern Poverty Law Center as hate groups, Living Church of God, Lost history, Lost tribe, Manchukuo Temporary Government, Mark Lee (American author), Masami Uno, Mayanism, Menasseh Ben Israel, Messiah ben Joseph, Messiah in Judaism, Messianic Judaism, Michael Freund (Israeli activist), Mizo people, Modern attempts to revive the Sanhedrin, Montesinos, Mordecai Sultansky, Mormonism, Mormonism in the 19th century, Moses ben Avraham Avinu, Mound Builders, Mountain Jews, Mystery airship, Najran, Natasha Mozgovaya, Nathan Ausubel, Nathaniel Holmes, Nathaniel Wood, Nazario Collection, Nelson McCausland, Neuri, New Israelites, New Jerusalem, Newark Holy Stones, Nicholas McLeod, Nimat Allah al-Harawi, Nitzavim, Noach (parsha), Non-resident Indian and person of Indian origin, Nordic Israelism, Northern Cherokee Nation of the Old Louisiana Territory, Origin of the Book of Mormon, Outline of Judaism, Pahath-Moab, Palenque, Paravar, Pashtuns, Petrus Serrarius, Polynesian culture, Population transfer, Pseudoarchaeology, Pseudohistory, Red Jews, Rehoboam, Religion in Ethiopia, Resettlement of the Jews in England, Revelation (Latter Day Saints), Revival Centres International, Richard Brothers, Richard Reader Harris (barrister), Ritual purification, Sabbatai Zevi, Samaritanism, Samaritans, Sambation, Samuel Lee (minister), Sargon II, Scythians, Second Coming (LDS Church), Second Nephi, Semei Kakungulu, Semikhah, Shalmaneser V, Shalva Weil, Shavei Israel, Simcha Jacobovici, Sons of Zadok, Studies of the Book of Mormon, Talbot Mundy, Tara (Northern Ireland), Terrorism, The Harbinger (novel), The Lost Chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, The Plain Truth, The Rozabal Line, The United States elevated to Glory and Honor, The Wonders of Nature, Theaurau John Tany, Theories of Pashtun origin, Theory of Kashmiri descent from lost tribes of Israel, Thomas Foster (author), Thomas Torrance, Timeline of Jewish history, Timeline of the Assyrian Empire, Timeline of the history of the region of Palestine, Toba Batak people, Tribe of Asher, Tribe of Dan, Tribe of Ephraim, Tribe of Gad, Tribe of Joseph, Tribe of Manasseh, Tribe of Naphtali, Tribe of Zebulun, Tsvi Misinai, Tu B'Av, Twelve Tribes of Israel, Two House theology, United Church of God, United States in Prophecy, Vayeira, View of the Hebrews, Who is a Jew?, William H. Poole, William Whiston, 10, 1975 in Prophecy!, 2005 in Israel. Expand index (203 more) »
Abraham Abulafia
Abraham ben Samuel Abulafia (אברהם בן שמואל אבולעפיה) was the founder of the school of "Prophetic Kabbalah".
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Afghana
Afghana or Avagana is a tribal chief or prince in Pashtun folklore, said to be of Bani Israel (Israelite) origin, who is traditionally considered the progenitor of modern-day Pashtuns,Socio-economic Behaviour of Pukhtun Tribe By Dipali Saha, Dipali Saha - 2006 - 282 pages - Page 124.
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Afridi
The Afrīdī (اپريدی Aprīdai, plur. اپريدي Aprīdī; آفریدی) is a Pashtun tribe present in Pakistan, with substantial numbers in Afghanistan.
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Ahmadiyya
Ahmadiyya (officially, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community or the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama'at; الجماعة الإسلامية الأحمدية, transliterated: al-Jamā'ah al-Islāmiyyah al-Aḥmadiyyah; احمدیہ مسلم جماعت) is an Islamic religious movement founded in Punjab, British India, in the late 19th century.
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Ahmadiyya and other faiths
The Ahmadiyya movement in Islam has relationships with a number of other religions.
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Aliyah
Aliyah (עֲלִיָּה aliyah, "ascent") is the immigration of Jews from the diaspora to the Land of Israel (Eretz Israel in Hebrew).
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Amotz Asa-El
Award-winning journalist Amotz Asa-El (Hebrew אמוץ עשהאל), the Jerusalem Post's senior columnist and former executive director, is a senior editor of the Jerusalem Report and a leading commentator on Middle Eastern, Israeli, and Jewish affairs.
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Antisemitism in Japan
With only a small and relatively obscure Jewish population, Japan had no traditional antisemitism until nationalist ideology and propaganda influenced a small number of Japanese in the years preceding World War II.
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Antisemitism in the United States
Antisemitism has existed in the United States for centuries.
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Antonio de Montezinos
Antonio de Montezinos, also known as Aharon Levi was a Portuguese traveler and a Marrano Sephardic Jew who in 1644 persuaded Menasseh Ben Israel, a rabbi of Amsterdam, that he had found one of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel living in the jungles of the "Quito Province" (that is, the Pichincha Province) of Ecuador.
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Armstrongism
Armstrongism is a term, usually considered derisive, used to refer to the teachings and doctrines of Herbert W. Armstrong while leader of the Worldwide Church of God (WCG).
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Asahel Grant
Asahel Grant (August 17, 1807 – April 24, 1844) was one of the first American missionaries to Iran.
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Assyria and Germany in Anglo-Israelism
In Anglo-Israelism and some currents of U.S. Christian fundamentalism, the idea has been advanced that modern Germans are partly descended from the ancient Assyrians.
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Assyrian captivity
The Assyrian captivity (or the Assyrian exile) is the period in the history of Ancient Israel and Judah during which several thousand Israelites of ancient Samaria were resettled as captives by Assyria.
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Bani Isra'il
In an Islamic context, Bani Isra'il (بني إسرائيل "sons of Israel") may refer to.
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Baudolino
Baudolino is a 2000 novel by Umberto Eco about the adventures of a man named Baudolino in the known and mythical Christian world of the 12th century.
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Behistun Inscription
The Behistun Inscription (also Bisotun, Bistun or Bisutun; بیستون, Old Persian: Bagastana, meaning "the place of god") is a multilingual inscription and large rock relief on a cliff at Mount Behistun in the Kermanshah Province of Iran, near the city of Kermanshah in western Iran.
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Bene Ephraim
The Bene Ephraim (בני אפריים) Bnei Ephraim ("Sons of Ephraim"), also called Telugu Jews because they speak Telugu, are a small community living primarily in Kotha Reddy palem, a village outside Chebrolu, Guntur District, and in Machilipatnam, Krishna District, Andhra Pradesh, India, near the delta of the River Krishna.
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Bene Israel
The Bene Israel ("Sons of Israel"), formerly known in India as the "Shanivar Teli" caste (Saturday Oil Presser caste) and later as the "Native Jew Caste", are a historic community of Jews in India.
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Beowulf (DC Comics)
Beowulf is a fictional character of the swords and sorcery genre published by DC Comics.
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Beta Israel
Beta Israel (בֵּיתֶא יִשְׂרָאֵל, Beyte (beyt) Yisrael; ቤተ እስራኤል, Bēta 'Isrā'ēl, modern Bēte 'Isrā'ēl, EAE: "Betä Ǝsraʾel", "House of Israel" or "Community of Israel"), also known as Ethiopian Jews (יְהוּדֵי אֶתְיוֹפְּיָה: Yehudey Etyopyah; Ge'ez: የኢትዮጵያ አይሁድዊ, ye-Ityoppya Ayhudi), are Jews whose community developed and lived for centuries in the area of the Kingdom of Aksum and the Ethiopian Empire that is currently divided between the Amhara and Tigray Regions of Ethiopia and Eritrea.
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Black Hebrew Israelites
Black Hebrew Israelites (also called Black Hebrews, African Hebrew Israelites, and Hebrew Israelites) are groups of Black Americans who believe that they are descendants of the ancient Israelites.
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Bloodletting in Mesoamerica
Bloodletting was the ritualized self-cutting or piercing of an individual's body that served a number of ideological and cultural functions within ancient Mesoamerican societies, in particular the Maya.
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Bnei Menashe
The Bnei Menashe (בני מנשה, "Sons of Menasseh") are a ethnolinguistic group in India's North-Eastern border states of Manipur and Mizoram; since the late 20th century, they claim descent from one of the Lost Tribes of Israel and have adopted the practice of Judaism.
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Bo (parsha)
Bo (— in Hebrew, the command form of "go," or "come," and the first significant word in the parashah, in) is the fifteenth weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the third in the Book of Exodus.
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Book of Ballymote
The Book of Ballymote (RIA MS 23 P 12, 275 foll.), was written in 1390 or 1391 in or near the town of Ballymote, now in County Sligo, but then in the tuath of Corann.
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Book of Mormon
The Book of Mormon is a sacred text of the Latter Day Saint movement, which adherents believe contains writings of ancient prophets who lived on the American continent from approximately 2200 BC to AD 421.
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British Israelism
British Israelism (also called Anglo-Israelism) is a movement which holds the view that the people of England (or more broadly, the people of United Kingdom) are "genetically, racially, and linguistically the direct descendants" of the Ten Lost Tribes of ancient Israel.
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British-Israel-World Federation
The British-Israel-World Federation, also known as the British-Israel World Federation was founded in London on 3 July 1919, although its roots can be traced back to the 19th century.
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Bukharan Jews
Bukharan Jews, also Bukharian Jews or Bukhari Jews (Бухарские евреи Bukharskie evrei; בוכרים Bukharim; Tajik and Bukhori Cyrillic: яҳудиёни бухороӣ Yahudiyoni bukhoroī (Bukharan Jews) or яҳудиёни Бухоро Yahudiyoni Bukhoro (Jews of Bukhara), Bukhori Hebrew Script: and), are Jews of the Mizrahi branch from Central Asia who historically spoke Bukhori, a Tajik dialect of the Persian language.
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C. A. L. Totten
Charles Adelle Lewis Totten (February 3, 1851 – April 12, 1908) was an American military officer, a professor of military tactics, a prolific writer, and an influential early advocate of British Israelism.
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Caratacus
Caratacus (Brythonic *Caratācos, Middle Welsh Caratawc; Welsh Caradog; Breton Karadeg; Greek Καράτακος; variants Latin Caractacus, Greek Καρτάκης) was a 1st-century AD British chieftain of the Catuvellauni tribe, who led the British resistance to the Roman conquest.
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Charles Fox Parham
Charles F. Parham (June 4, 1873 – c. January 29, 1929) was an American preacher and evangelist.
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Charles Ottley Groom Napier
Charles Ottley Groom Napier also known as C. O. G Napier FGS FLS (14 May 1839 – 17 January 1894) was a natural historian, geologist, mineral collector, as well a writer on vegetarianism, ornithology and an early proponent of British Israelism.
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Chatata
Chatata (pronounced SHAY-tay) is the original Cherokee Indian name of a populated area located in Bradley County, Tennessee.
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Christian Identity
Christian Identity (also known as Identity Christianity) is a racist, anti-Semitic, and white supremacist interpretation of Christianity which holds that only Germanic, Anglo-Saxon, Celtic, Nordic, Aryan people and those of kindred blood are the descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and hence the descendants of the ancient Israelites (primarily as a result of the Assyrian captivity).
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Christian messianic prophecies
The New Testament frequently cites Jewish scripture to support the claim of the Early Christians that Jesus of Nazareth is the Messiah, and faith in Jesus as the Christos and his imminent expected Second Coming.
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Christian terrorism
Christian terrorism comprises terrorist acts by groups or individuals who profess Christian motivations or goals.
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Circumcision controversies
Male circumcision has often been, and remains, the subject of controversy on a number of grounds—including religious, ethical, sexual, and health.
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Commandment Keepers
The Commandment Keepers Ethiopian Hebrew Congregation of the Living God Pillar & Ground of Truth, Inc. are a sect of Black Hebrews, who believe that people of Ethiopian descent represent one of the lost tribes of Israel.
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Conquistador
Conquistadors (from Spanish or Portuguese conquistadores "conquerors") is a term used to refer to the soldiers and explorers of the Spanish Empire or the Portuguese Empire in a general sense.
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CRC Churches International
CRC Churches International, formerly known as the Christian Revival Crusade, is a Pentecostal Protestant Christian denomination founded in New Zealand and Australia by Thomas Foster (Melbourne) and Leo Harris (Adelaide).
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Criticism of the Bible
The view that the Bible should be accepted as historically accurate and as a reliable guide to morality has been questioned by many scholars in the field of biblical criticism.
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Daniel Juslenius
Daniel Juslenius (10 June 1676, Mynämäki – 17 July 1752, Skara) was a Finnish writer and bishop.
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Daniel Sabin Butrick
Rev.
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David Horowitz (author)
David Horowitz (1903–2002) was the founder of the United Israel World Union and one of eight children of Cantor Aaron and Bertha Horowitz, whose family immigrated to the United States in 1914.
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Davidic line
The Davidic line refers to the tracing of lineage to King David through the texts in the Hebrew Bible, in the New Testament, and through the following centuries.
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De Montesinos
de Montesinos may refer to.
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Demetrius the Chronographer
Demetrius the Chronographer (or Demetrius the Chronicler; Δημήτριος) was a Jewish chronicler (historian) of the late 3rd century BCE, who lived probably in Alexandria and wrote in Greek.
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Demographics of Israel
The demographics of Israel are monitored by the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics.
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Demographics of Tajikistan
The Demographics of Tajikistan is about the demographic features of the population of Tajikistan, including population growth, population density, ethnicity, education level, health, economic status, religious affiliations, and other aspects of the population.
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Denis Michael Rohan
Denis Michael Rohan (1 July 1941 – 1995) was a Christian Australian citizen who, on 21 August 1969, set fire to the pulpit of the Al-Aqsa mosque, in Jerusalem.
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Deportation
Deportation is the expulsion of a person or group of people from a place or country.
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Dispensation (period)
In Christianity, one meaning of the term dispensation is as a distinctive arrangement or period in history that forms the framework through which God relates to mankind.
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Edward Brerewood
Edward Brerewood (or Bryerwood) (c. 1565–1613) was an English scholar and antiquary.
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Edward King, Viscount Kingsborough
Edward King, Viscount Kingsborough (16 November 1795 – 27 February 1837) was an Irish antiquarian who sought to prove that the indigenous peoples of the Americas were a Lost Tribe of Israel.
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Eldad ha-Dani
Eldad ha-Dani or Eldad HaDani or Eldad ben Mahli ha-Dani (אלדד הדני) was a Jewish, Hebrew-writing merchant and traveler of the ninth century.
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Elijah of Ferrara
Elijah of Ferrara (Hebrew: אליהו מפררה, or אליהו מפרארה) was a Jewish-Italian Talmudist and traveler of the earlier part of the 15th century.
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Eric Rudolph
Eric Robert Rudolph (born September 19, 1966), also known as the Olympic Park Bomber, is an American domestic terrorist convicted for a series of anti-abortion and anti-gay-motivated bombings across the southern United States between 1996 and 1998, which killed two people and injured over 120 others.
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Ethan Smith (clergyman)
Ethan Smith (1762–1849) was a New England Congregationalist clergyman in the United States who wrote View of the Hebrews (1823), a book that argued that Native Americans were descended from the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel.
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Ethiopian Jews in Israel
Ethiopian Jews in Israel are immigrants and descendants of the immigrants of the Beta Israel communities of Ethiopia, who now reside in Israel.
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Ethnic groups in Afghanistan
Afghanistan is a multiethnic and mostly-tribal society.
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Expulsions and exoduses of Jews
In Jewish history, Jews have experienced numerous mass expulsions or ostracism by various local authorities and have sought refuge in other countries.
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Foreign relations of Israel
Israel joined the United Nations on 11 May 1949.
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Frank Sandford
Frank Weston Sandford (October 2, 1862 – March 4, 1948)Shirley Nelson, Fair Clear and Terrible: The Story of Shiloh, Maine (Latham, New York: British American Publishing, 1989), 27.
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French Israelism
French Israelism (also called Franco-Israelism) is the belief that people of Frankish descent are also the direct lineal descendants of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, and it is often accompanied by the belief that the Merovingian dynasty is directly descended from the line of King David.
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Garner Ted Armstrong
Garner Ted Armstrong (February 9, 1930 – September 15, 2003) was an American evangelist and the son of Herbert W. Armstrong, founder of the Worldwide Church of God, at the time a Sabbatarian organization that taught observance of seventh-day Sabbath, and annual Sabbath days based on Leviticus 23.
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Gates of Alexander
The Gates of Alexander was a legendary barrier supposedly built by Alexander the Great in the Caucasus to keep the uncivilized barbarians of the north (typically associated with Gog and Magog) from invading the land to the south.
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Gathering (LDS Church)
Gathering has been an important part of life in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), from gathering as missionaries to gathering for worship services.
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Ghana–Israel relations
Ghana–Israel relations refers to the current and historical relationship between Ghana and Israel.
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Gog and Magog
Gog and Magog (גּוֹג וּמָגוֹג Gog u-Magog) in the Hebrew Bible may be individuals, peoples, or lands; a prophesied enemy nation of God's people according to the Book of Ezekiel, and according to Genesis, one of the nations descended from Japheth, son of Noah.
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Grace Communion International
Grace Communion International (GCI), formerly the Worldwide Church of God (WCG) (still registered as Worldwide Church of God in the UK and some other regions) and the Radio Church of God, is an evangelical Christian denomination based in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S.A., with the former mentioned organizations having had an often controversial influence on 20th century religious broadcasting and publishing in the United States and Europe.
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Groups claiming affiliation with Israelites
Groups claiming affiliation with Israelites are groups which claim descent from the ancient Israelites.
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Harriet Livermore
Harriet Livermore (April 14, 1788-1868), is best known as a preacher, becoming one of the most well-known female preachers in America in the 19th century.
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Hata clan
The was an immigrant clan active in Japan since the Kofun period (250–538), according to the history of Japan laid out in Nihon Shoki.
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Helene Koppejan
Helene Koppejan (born Helene van Woelderen; 20 August 1927, Vlissingen - 27 February 1998, Glastonbury) was a Dutch astrologer and entrepreneur.
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Henry Wentworth Monk
Henry Wentworth Monk (April 6, 1827 – August 24, 1896) was a Canadian Christian Zionist, mystic, Messianist, and millenarian.
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Herbert W. Armstrong
Herbert W. Armstrong (July 31, 1892 – January 16, 1986) founded the Radio Church of God which was incorporated October 21, 1933 and was renamed Worldwide Church of God on June 1, 1968, as well as starting Ambassador College (later Ambassador University) October 8, 1947.
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Hezekiah
Hezekiah was, according to the Hebrew Bible, the son of Ahaz and the 13th king of Judah.
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Hill of Tara
The Hill of Tara (Teamhair or Teamhair na Rí), located near the River Boyne, is an archaeological complex that runs between Navan and Dunshaughlin in County Meath, Ireland.
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Hillel Halkin
Hillel Halkin (הלל הלקין; born 1939) is an American-born Israeli translator, biographer, literary critic, and novelist, who has lived in Israel since 1970.
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Hinduism and Judaism
Hinduism and Judaism are among the oldest existing religions in the world.
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History of Israel
Modern Israel is roughly located on the site of the ancient kingdoms of Israel and Judah.
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History of Palestine
The history of Palestine is the study of the past in the region of Palestine, generally defined as a geographic region in the Southern Levant between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River (where Israel and Palestine are today), and various adjoining lands.
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History of the Jews and Judaism in the Land of Israel
The Jewish people originated in the land of Israel, and have maintained physical, cultural, and religious ties to it ever since.
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History of the Jews in Africa
African Jewish communities include.
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History of the Jews in China
Jews and Judaism in China are predominantly composed of Sephardi Jews and their descendants.
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History of the Jews in India
The history of the Jews in India reaches back to ancient times.
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History of the Jews in Iran
The beginnings of Jewish history in Iran date back to late biblical times.
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History of the Jews in Kairouan
The Tunisian city of Kairouan (קירואן, قيروان), also known as Kirwan or al-Qayrawan was a world center of Talmudic and Halakhic scholarship for at least three generations.
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History of the Jews in Saudi Arabia
The history of Jews in Saudi Arabia refers to the Jewish history in the areas that are now within the territory of Saudi Arabia.
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History of the Marranos in England
The History of Marranos in England consists of the Marranos' contribution and achievement in England.
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I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream (video game)
I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream is a point-and-click adventure game based upon Harlan Ellison's short story of the same title, developed by The Dreamers Guild, co-designed by Ellison and published by Cyberdreams in.
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Index of articles related to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
This is an index of articles about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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India–Israel relations
India–Israel relations refers to the bilateral ties between the Republic of India and the State of Israel.
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Israeli Jews
Israeli Jews (יהודים ישראלים, Yehudim Yisraelim), also known as Jewish Israelis, refers to Israeli citizens of the Jewish ethnicity or faith, and also the descendants of Israeli-Jewish emigrants outside of Israel.
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Israelis
Israelis (ישראלים Yiśraʾelim, الإسرائيليين al-ʾIsrāʾīliyyin) are citizens or permanent residents of the State of Israel, a multiethnic state populated by people of different ethnic backgrounds.
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J. H. Allen
John Harden Allen (1847 – May 14, 1930) was an American minister.
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James Owen Dorsey
James Owen Dorsey (October 31, 1848 – February 4, 1895) was an American ethnologist, linguist, and Episcopalian missionary in the Dakota Territory, who contributed to the description of the Ponca, Omaha, and other southern Siouan languages.
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Japanese-Jewish common ancestry theory
The is a fringe theory that appeared in the 17th century as a hypothesis which claimed the Japanese people were the main part of the ten lost tribes of Israel.
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Jean-Frédéric Waldeck
Jean-Frédéric Maximilien de Waldeck (March 16, 1766? – April 30, 1875) was a French antiquarian, cartographer, artist and explorer.
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Jeroboam's Revolt
Jeroboam's Revolt was an armed insurrection against Rehoboam, king of the United Monarchy of Israel, and subsequently the Kingdom of Judah, lead by Jeroboam in the late 10th century BCE, as described by the First Book of Kings and the Second Book of Chronicles of the Hebrew Bible.
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Jesus in Ahmadiyya Islam
The Ahmadiyya movement believe that Jesus survived The Crucifixion and migrated eastward towards Kashmir to escape persecution.
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Jesus in India (book)
Jesus in India (مسیح ہندوستان میں.; Masīh Hindustān Meiń) is a treatise written by Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, the founder of the Ahmadiyya Movement in 1899.
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Jewish ethnic divisions
Jewish ethnic divisions refers to a number of distinctive communities within the world's ethnically Jewish population.
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Jewish history
Jewish history is the history of the Jews, and their religion and culture, as it developed and interacted with other peoples, religions and cultures.
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Jewish mysticism
Academic study of Jewish mysticism, especially since Gershom Scholem's Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism (1941), distinguishes between different forms of mysticism across different eras of Jewish history.
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Jews
Jews (יְהוּדִים ISO 259-3, Israeli pronunciation) or Jewish people are an ethnoreligious group and a nation, originating from the Israelites Israelite origins and kingdom: "The first act in the long drama of Jewish history is the age of the Israelites""The people of the Kingdom of Israel and the ethnic and religious group known as the Jewish people that descended from them have been subjected to a number of forced migrations in their history" and Hebrews of the Ancient Near East.
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Jews of Bilad el-Sudan
Jews of the Bilad al-Sudan (Judeo-Arabic) describes West African Jewish communities who were connected to known Jewish communities from the Middle East, North Africa, or Spain and Portugal.
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John Campanius
John Campanius (Swedish: Johannes Jonæ Holmiensis Campanius; August 15, 1601 – September 17, 1683), also known as John Campanius Holm, was a Swedish Lutheran priest assigned to the New Sweden colony.
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John Dury
John Dury (1596 in Edinburgh – 1680 in Kassel) was a Scottish Calvinist minister and a significant intellectual of the English Civil War period.
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John Howard Payne
John Howard Payne (June 9, 1791 – April 10, 1852) was an American actor, poet, playwright, and author who had most of his theatrical career and success in London.
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John Michell (writer)
John Frederick Carden Michell (9 February 1933 – 24 April 2009) was an English author and esotericist who was a prominent figure in the development of the Earth mysteries movement.
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Joseph Wolff
Joseph Wolff (1795 – 2 May 1862), a Jewish Christian missionary, was born at Weilersbach, near Bamberg, Germany.
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Josiah Priest
Josiah Priest (1788–1861) was an American nonfiction writer of the early 19th century.
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Juan Galindo
Juan Galindo (1802–1839) was a Central American explorer and army officer.
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Judah ben Shalom
Judah ben Shalom (died ca. 1878) (Hebrew: יהודה בן שלום), also known as Mori (Master) Shooker Kohail II or Shukr Kuhayl II (Hebrew: מרי שכר כחיל), was a Yemenite messianic claimant of the mid-19th century.
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Judaism and Mormonism
Mormonism, or the Latter Day Saint movement, teaches that its adherents are either direct descendants of the House of Israel or adopted into it.
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Judaizers
Judaizers is a term for Christians who decide to adopt Jewish customs and practices such as, primarily, the Law of Moses.
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Juji Nakada
was a Japanese holiness evangelist, known as "the Dwight Moody of Japan" (Stark 28-29), who was the first bishop of the Japan Holiness Church and one of the co-founders of the Oriental Missionary Society (now One Mission Society).
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Kashmiris
The Kashmiris (کٲشُر لُکھ / कॉशुर लुख) are an ethnic group native to the Kashmir Valley, in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir, who speak Kashmiri, an Indo-Aryan Dardic language.
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Khazar Correspondence
The Khazar Correspondence was an exchange of letters in the 950s or 960s between Hasdai ibn Shaprut, foreign secretary to the Caliph of Cordoba, and Joseph Khagan of the Khazars.
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Khazars
The Khazars (خزر, Xəzərlər; Hazarlar; Хазарлар; Хәзәрләр, Xäzärlär; כוזרים, Kuzarim;, Xazar; Хоза́ри, Chozáry; Хаза́ры, Hazáry; Kazárok; Xazar; Χάζαροι, Cházaroi; p./Gasani) were a semi-nomadic Turkic people, who created what for its duration was the most powerful polity to emerge from the break-up of the Western Turkic Khaganate.
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Khuplam Milui Lenthang
Khuplam Milui Lenthang (died January 2014) was an Indian anthropologist, doctor, and ethnographer specialising in the origins of the Kuki people.
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Kingdom of David
Kingdom of David was a part of the Empire Series of history documentaries for the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) Public television stations produced by Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB) in joint venture with Red Hill Productions of Los Angeles, California.
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Kingdom of Israel (Samaria)
According to the Hebrew Bible, the Kingdom of Israel was one of two successor states to the former United Kingdom of Israel and Judah.
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Kuki people
The Kukis constitute one of several hill tribes within the India, Bangladesh, and Burma.
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La Ciudad Blanca
La Ciudad Blanca (Spanish for "The White City") is a legendary settlement said to be located in the Mosquitia region of the Gracias a Dios Department in eastern Honduras.
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Lake of No Return
Lake of No Return (Naongxyang in Tangshang Naga) body of water in Myanmar, lying in the area of the Pangsau Pass (3727') on the India-Myanmar border south of Pangsau (also called Pansaung) village.
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LaPorte Church of Christ
LaPorte Church of Christ is an independent church in Laporte, Colorado, led until 2011 by Pastor Peter J. Peters (November 13, 1946 – July 7, 2011), who proclaimed that Europeans comprise the twelve lost tribes of Israel and that contemporary Jews are satanic impostors (based on and) and the descendants of the Biblical Esau (Edom) -- the brother and nemesis of Jacob (Israel).
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Lemba people
The Lemba, wa-Remba, or MwenyeParfitt, Tudor.
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Lewis H. Morgan
Lewis Henry Morgan (November 21, 1818 – December 17, 1881) was a pioneering American anthropologist and social theorist who worked as a railroad lawyer.
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List of Christian movements
A Christian movement is a theological, political, or philosophical interpretation of Christianity that is not generally represented by a specific church, sect, or denomination.
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List of Digging for the Truth episodes
Digging for the Truth was a History Channel television series.
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List of Mormon folk beliefs
In The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), folklore is usually distinguished from church doctrine, but there is no universally accepted method of determining where doctrine ends and folklore begins.
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List of organizations designated by the Southern Poverty Law Center as hate groups
The following is a list of U.S.-based organizations classified by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) as hate groups.
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Living Church of God
The Living Church of God (LCG) is one of hundreds of groups that formed after the death of Herbert W. Armstrong, when major doctrinal changes (causing turmoil and divisions) were occurring in the former Worldwide Church of God (WCG) during the 1990s.
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Lost history
Many significant locations, cultures/groups, and objects throughout history have been lost, inspiring archaeologists and treasure-hunters around the world to search for them.
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Lost tribe
Lost tribe(s) may refer to.
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Manchukuo Temporary Government
The Manchukuo Temporary Government is an organisation established in 2004 in Hong Kong.
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Mark Lee (American author)
Mark W. Lee is an American novelist, children's book writer, poet and playwright.
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Masami Uno
is a Japanese writer.
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Mayanism
Mayanism is a non-codified eclectic collection of New Age beliefs, influenced in part by Pre-Columbian Maya mythology and some folk beliefs of the modern Maya peoples.
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Menasseh Ben Israel
Manoel Dias Soeiro (1604 – November 20, 1657), better known by his Hebrew name Menasseh ben Israel, also, Menasheh ben Yossef ben Yisrael, also known with the Hebrew acronym, MB"Y, was a Portuguese rabbi, kabbalist, writer, diplomat, printer and publisher, founder of the first Hebrew printing press (named Emeth Meerets Titsma`h) in Amsterdam in 1626.
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Messiah ben Joseph
In Jewish eschatology Mashiach ben Yoseph or Messiah ben Joseph (משיח בן־יוסף Mašīaḥ ben Yōsēf), also known as Mashiach bar/ben Ephraim (Aram./Heb.), is a Jewish messiah from the tribe of Ephraim and a descendant of Joseph.
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Messiah in Judaism
The messiah in Judaism is a savior and liberator of the Jewish people.
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Messianic Judaism
Messianic Judaism is a modern syncretic religious movement that combines Christianity—most importantly, the belief that Jesus is the Messiah—with elements of Judaism and Jewish tradition, its current form emerging in the 1960s and 1970s.
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Michael Freund (Israeli activist)
Michael Freund is an American-born Israeli political activist and non-profit executive who advocates on behalf of individuals and groups who self-identify as Jews or would-be Jews, including self-described descendants of the Lost tribes of Israel, crypto-Jews, hidden Jews, and Jews forcibly assimilated under Communist rule, and converts to Judaism, attempting to regularize their legal status as Jews under Israeli law and secure permission for them to immigrate to Israel under the Law of Return.
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Mizo people
The Mizo people (Mizo: Mizo hnam) are an ethnic group native to north-eastern India, western Burma (Myanmar) and eastern Bangladesh; this term covers several ethnic peoples who speak various northern and central Kuki-Chin languages.
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Modern attempts to revive the Sanhedrin
Modern attempts to revive the Sanhedrin are the efforts from 1538 AD until the present day to renew the Sanhedrin which was dissolved in 358 AD by the edict of the Byzantine emperor.
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Montesinos
Montesinos may refer to.
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Mordecai Sultansky
Mordecai Sultansky (מרדכי סולטנסקי) was a Crimean Karaite hakham of the nineteenth century.
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Mormonism
Mormonism is the predominant religious tradition of the Latter Day Saint movement of Restorationist Christianity started by Joseph Smith in Western New York in the 1820s and 30s.
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Mormonism in the 19th century
This is a chronology of Mormonism.
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Moses ben Avraham Avinu
Moses ben Avraham Avinu (died ca. 1733/34) was a Czech-Austrian printer and author who was a Christian convert to Judaism.
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Mound Builders
The various cultures collectively termed Mound Builders were inhabitants of North America who, during a 5,000-year period, constructed various styles of earthen mounds for religious, ceremonial, burial, and elite residential purposes.
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Mountain Jews
Mountain Jews or Caucasus Jews also known as Juhuro, Juvuro, Juhuri, Juwuri, Juhurim, Kavkazi Jews or Gorsky Jews (Dağ Yəhudiləri, יהודי קווקז Yehudey Kavkaz or Yehudey he-Harim, translit) are Jews of the eastern and northern Caucasus, mainly Azerbaijan, Chechnya, Dagestan and Ingushetia.
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Mystery airship
Mystery airships or phantom airships are a class of unidentified flying objects best known from a series of newspaper reports originating in the western United States and spreading east during late 1896 and early 1897.
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Najran
Najran (نجران), is a city in southwestern Saudi Arabia near the border with Yemen.
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Natasha Mozgovaya
Natasha Mozgovaya (נטשה מוזגוביה, Наташа Мозговая; born 1979) is an American-Israeli journalist.
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Nathan Ausubel
Nathan Ausubel (1898–1986) was an American historian, folklorist and humorist.
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Nathaniel Holmes
Nathaniel Holmes or HomesAlso Nathanael.
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Nathaniel Wood
Nathaniel Wood, Sr., was the leader of a sect called the New Israelites, which was formed in Middletown, Rutland County, Vermont at the end of the 1790s.
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Nazario Collection
The Nazario Collection (Colección Nazario), also known as Agüeybaná's Library (Biblioteca de Agüeybaná), Father Nazario's Rocks (Piedras del Padre Nazario), and the Phoenician Rocks (Piedras Fenicias), is the name commonly used to describe a cache of carved stones that originated at Guayanilla, Puerto Rico.
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Nelson McCausland
Nelson McCausland (born 15 August 1951) is a Unionist politician from Northern Ireland.
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Neuri
According to Herodotus the Neuri were a tribe living beyond the Scythian, one of the nations along the course of the river Ὕπανις Hypanis (Southern Bug River), West of the Βορυσθένης Borysthenes (Dniepr river), roughly the area of modern northern (initially north western) Ukraine (historic Volyn) and southern Belarus.
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New Israelites
The New Israelites were a radical sect founded by Nathaniel Wood in Vermont in the 1790s.
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New Jerusalem
In the Book of Ezekiel in the Hebrew Bible, New Jerusalem (Jehovah-shammah, or " YHWH there") is Ezekiel's prophetic vision of a city centered on the rebuilt Holy Temple, the Third Temple, to be established in Jerusalem, which would be the capital of the Messianic Kingdom, the meeting place of the twelve tribes of Israel, during the Messianic era.
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Newark Holy Stones
The Newark Holy Stones refer to a set of artifacts allegedly discovered by David Wyrick in 1860 within a cluster of ancient Indian burial mounds near Newark, Ohio.
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Nicholas McLeod
Nicholas McLeod (fl. 1868–1889), in some accounts called Norman McLeod, was a native of the Isle of Skye, Scotland known for his theory that the Japanese people descended from the Lost Tribes of Israel.
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Nimat Allah al-Harawi
Ni'mat Allah al-Harawi (also known as Niamatullah) was a chronicler at the court of the Mughal Emperor Jahangir where he compiled a Persian history of the Afghans, the Makhzan-i-Afghani.
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Nitzavim
Nitzavim, Nitsavim, Nitzabim, Netzavim, or Nesabim (— Hebrew for "ones standing," the second word, and the first distinctive word, in the parashah) is the 51st weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the eighth in the Book of Deuteronomy.
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Noach (parsha)
Noach, Noiach, Nauach, Nauah, or Noah (Hebrew for the name "Noah", the third word, and first distinctive word, of the parashah) is the second weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading.
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Non-resident Indian and person of Indian origin
No description.
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Nordic Israelism
Nordic Israelism or Norse Israelism is the belief that Scandinavian peoples, or the Nordic countries (Sweden, Denmark, Faroe Islands, Finland, Iceland, Norway) descend from the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel.
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Northern Cherokee Nation of the Old Louisiana Territory
The Northern Cherokee Nation of the Old Louisiana Territory, also known as the Northern Cherokee Nation, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization of individuals who identify as Cherokee but have not been recognized as a government.
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Origin of the Book of Mormon
There are several theories as to the origin of the Book of Mormon.
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Outline of Judaism
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Judaism.
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Pahath-Moab
Pahath-moab (Hebrew "governor of Moab") was the ancestor of a Judahite clan that returned from the Babylonian Exile and assisted in rebuilding Jerusalem.
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Palenque
Palenque (Yucatec Maya: Bàakʼ /ɓàːkʼ/), also anciently known as Lakamha (literally: "Big Water"), was a Maya city state in southern Mexico that flourished in the 7th century.
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Paravar
Parava or Paravar, also known as Parathavar, Paradavar, Bharathar, Bharathakula PandyarIyengar p. 139 or Bharathakula KshathriyarSubrahmanian p. 151 is a community in southern India that in ancient times were coastal inhabitants, seafarers, maritime traders and subordinate rulers to Pandyas, as well as according to at least one modern writer, described as "ferocious soldiers".
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Pashtuns
The Pashtuns (or; پښتانه Pax̌tānə; singular masculine: پښتون Pax̌tūn, feminine: پښتنه Pax̌tana; also Pukhtuns), historically known as ethnic Afghans (افغان, Afğān) and Pathans (Hindustani: پٹھان, पठान, Paṭhān), are an Iranic ethnic group who mainly live in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
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Petrus Serrarius
Petrus Serrarius (1600–1669; born in London) was a Dutch millenarian theologian.
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Polynesian culture
Polynesian culture is the culture of the indigenous peoples of Polynesia who share common traits in language, customs and society.
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Population transfer
Population transfer or resettlement is the movement of a large group of people from one region to another, often a form of forced migration imposed by state policy or international authority and most frequently on the basis of ethnicity or religion but also due to economic development.
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Pseudoarchaeology
Pseudoarchaeology—also known as alternative archaeology, fringe archaeology, fantastic archaeology, or cult archaeology—refers to interpretations of the past from outside of the archaeological science community, which reject the accepted datagathering and analytical methods of the discipline.
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Pseudohistory
Pseudohistory is a form of pseudoscholarship that attempts to distort or misrepresent the historical record, often using methods resembling those used in legitimate historical research.
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Red Jews
The Red Jews were a legendary Jewish nation that appear in vernacular sources in Germany during the medieval era, from the 5th to the 15th century.
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Rehoboam
Rehoboam was the fourth king of Israel according to the Hebrew Bible.
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Religion in Ethiopia
Religion in Ethiopia consists of a number of faiths.
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Resettlement of the Jews in England
The resettlement of the Jews in England was an informal arrangement during the Commonwealth of England in the mid-1650s, which allowed Jews to practise their faith openly.
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Revelation (Latter Day Saints)
Latter Day Saints teach that the Latter Day Saint movement began with a revelation from God.
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Revival Centres International
The Revival Centres International is a Pentecostal church with its headquarters in Melbourne, Australia.
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Richard Brothers
Richard Brothers (25 December 1757 – 25 January 1824) was an early believer and teacher of British Israelism, a theory concerning the Lost Ten Tribes of Israel.
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Richard Reader Harris (barrister)
Richard Reader Harris, K.C. (1847 – 25 March, 1909) was a prominent English barrister, King's Counsel and Master of the Bench of Gray's Inn, who was also a Methodist minister, founder of the Pentecostal League of Prayer, and author of 34 Christian books.
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Ritual purification
Ritual purification is the purification ritual prescribed by a religion by which a person about to perform some ritual is considered to be free of uncleanliness, especially prior to the worship of a deity, and ritual purity is a state of ritual cleanliness.
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Sabbatai Zevi
Sabbatai Zevi (other spellings include Shabbetai Ẓevi, Shabbeṯāy Ṣeḇī, Shabsai Tzvi, and Sabetay Sevi in Turkish) (August 1, 1626 – c. September 17, 1676) was a Sephardic ordained Rabbi, though of Romaniote origin and a kabbalist, active throughout the Ottoman Empire, who claimed to be the long-awaited Jewish Messiah.
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Samaritanism
Samaritan religion is the national religion of the Samaritans (Samaritan Hebrew: ࠔࠠࠌࠝࠓࠩࠉࠌ shamerim, "Guardians/Watchers ”; Hebrew: שומרונים shomronim, “ of Guard/Watch ”).
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Samaritans
The Samaritans (Samaritan Hebrew: ࠔࠠࠌࠝࠓࠩࠉࠌ,, "Guardians/Keepers/Watchers (of the Torah)") are an ethnoreligious group of the Levant originating from the Israelites (or Hebrews) of the Ancient Near East.
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Sambation
According to rabbinic literature, the Sambation is the river beyond which the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel were exiled by the Assyrian king Shalmaneser V (Sanchairev).
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Samuel Lee (minister)
Samuel Lee (1625–1691) was an English Puritan academic and minister, late in life in New England.
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Sargon II
Sargon II (Assyrian Šarru-ukīn (LUGAL-GI.NA 𒈗𒄀𒈾).; Aramaic סרגן; reigned 722–705 BC) was an Assyrian king.
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Scythians
or Scyths (from Greek Σκύθαι, in Indo-Persian context also Saka), were a group of Iranian people, known as the Eurasian nomads, who inhabited the western and central Eurasian steppes from about the 9th century BC until about the 1st century BC.
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Second Coming (LDS Church)
Members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believe that there will be a Second Coming of Jesus Christ to the earth sometime in the future.
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Second Nephi
The Second Book of Nephi, usually referred to as Second Nephi or 2 Nephi, is the second book of the Book of Mormon.
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Semei Kakungulu
Semei Kakungulu (1869 – 24 November 1928) was a Ugandan statesman who founded the Abayudaya (Luganda: Jews) community in Uganda in 1917.
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Semikhah
Smicha or semikhah (סמיכה, "leaning "), also smichut ("ordination"), smicha lerabbanut ("rabbinical ordination"), or smicha lehazzanut ("cantorial ordination"), is derived from a Hebrew word which means to "rely on" or "to be authorized".
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Shalmaneser V
Shalmaneser V was king of Assyria from 727 to 722 BC.
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Shalva Weil
Prof.
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Shavei Israel
Shavei Israel (שבי ישראל, Returners of Israel) is an Israeli-based Jewish organization that encourages people of Jewish descent to strengthen their connection with Israel and the Jewish people.
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Simcha Jacobovici
Simcha Jacobovici (born April 4, 1953) is an Israeli-Canadian film director, producer, freelance journalist, and writer.
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Sons of Zadok
The Sons of Zadok (בְּנֵי צָדֹוק bǝnê Ṣādōq) are a family of priests, kohens, descended from Zadok, the first high priest in Solomon's Temple.
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Studies of the Book of Mormon
Studies of the Book of Mormon is a collection of essays written at the beginning of the 20th century (though not published until 1985) by B. H. Roberts (1857–1933), a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), which examine the validity of the Book of Mormon as a translation of an ancient American source.
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Talbot Mundy
Talbot Mundy (born William Lancaster Gribbon, 23 April 1879 – 5 August 1940) was an English-born American writer of adventure fiction.
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Tara (Northern Ireland)
Tara was an Ulster loyalist movement in Northern Ireland that espoused a brand of evangelical Protestantism.
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Terrorism
Terrorism is, in the broadest sense, the use of intentionally indiscriminate violence as a means to create terror among masses of people; or fear to achieve a financial, political, religious or ideological aim.
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The Harbinger (novel)
The Harbinger is a 2012 best-selling Christian novel by Rabbi Jonathan Cahn, a Messianic Jew.
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The Lost Chapter of the Acts of the Apostles
The Lost Chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, also known as the Sonnini Manuscript, is a short text purporting to be the translation of a manuscript containing the 29th chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, detailing Paul the Apostle's journey to Britain, where he preached to a tribe of Israelites on Ludgate Hill, the site of St Paul's Cathedral.
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The Plain Truth
The Plain Truth, a former free of charge monthly magazine, was first published in 1934 by Herbert W. Armstrong, founder of The Radio Church of God, which he later named The Worldwide Church of God (WCG).
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The Rozabal Line
The Rozabal Line is a thriller fiction novel by Ashwin Sanghi, written under the pseudonym Shawn Haigins, that deals with the story of Jesus having survived the crucifixion and settled down in India.
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The United States elevated to Glory and Honor
The United States elevated to Glory and Honor is a book by Ezra Stiles, published in 1783.
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The Wonders of Nature
The Wonders of Nature is a book by Josiah Priest that was published in 1826.
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Theaurau John Tany
Theaurau John Tany (bap. Thomas Totney 21 January 1608 - 1659) was an English preacher and religious visionary.
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Theories of Pashtun origin
There are multiple claims or theories about the origins of the Pashtun tribes.
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Theory of Kashmiri descent from lost tribes of Israel
The theory of Kashmiri descent from the lost tribes of Israel posits that the Kashmiri people of India and Pakistan originally descended from the Ten Lost Tribes.
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Thomas Foster (author)
Thomas Norman Foster was an Australian Pentecostal minister.
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Thomas Torrance
Thomas Torrance (1871–1959), born in Shotts, Scotland, was a Protestant missionary to China.
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Timeline of Jewish history
This is a timeline of the development of Jews and Judaism.
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Timeline of the Assyrian Empire
The timeline of the Assyrian Empire lists the kings, their successors and the major events that occurred in the Assyrian history.
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Timeline of the history of the region of Palestine
This timeline represents major events in the region of Palestine, which at different times during human habitation included a diverse number of people, cultures, religions and nations while being a part of several major empires and an important trade link between Europe and North African coast in the west and Asia and India in the East.
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Toba Batak people
Toba people (also referred to as Batak Toba people or often simply "Batak") are the most numerous of the Batak people of North Sumatra, Indonesia, and often considered the classical 'Batak', most likely to willingly self-identify as Batak.
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Tribe of Asher
According to the Hebrew Bible, the Tribe of Asher was one of the Tribes of Israel.
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Tribe of Dan
The Tribe of Dan, meaning, "Judge," was one of the tribes of Israel, according to the Torah.
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Tribe of Ephraim
According to the Hebrew Bible, the Tribe of Ephraim was one of the Tribes of Israel.
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Tribe of Gad
According to the Hebrew Bible, the Tribe of Gad was one of the Twelve Tribes of Israel who, after the Exodus from Egypt, settled on the eastern side of the Jordan River.
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Tribe of Joseph
The Tribe of Joseph is one of the Tribes of Israel in biblical tradition.
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Tribe of Manasseh
According to the Hebrew Bible, the Tribe of Manasseh was one of the Tribes of Israel.
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Tribe of Naphtali
The Tribe of Naphtali was one of the twelve tribes of Israel.
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Tribe of Zebulun
According to the Hebrew Bible, the Tribe of Zebulun (alternatively rendered as Zabulon, Zabulin, Zabulun, Zebulon) was one of the twelve tribes of Israel.
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Tsvi Misinai
Tsvi Jekhorin Misinai (צבי מסיני; born 15 April 1946) is an Israeli researcher, author, historian, computer scientist and entrepreneur.
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Tu B'Av
Tu B'Av (Hebrew: ט"ו באב, the fifteenth of the month ''Av'') is a minor Jewish holiday.
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Twelve Tribes of Israel
According to the Hebrew Bible, the Twelve Tribes of Israel or Tribes of Israel (שבטי ישראל) were said to have descended from the 12 sons of the patriarch Jacob (who was later named Israel) by two wives, Leah and Rachel, and two concubines, Zilpah and Bilhah.
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Two House theology
Two House Theology primarily focuses on the division of the ancient United Monarchy of Israel into two kingdoms, Israel and Judah.
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United Church of God
The United Church of God, an International Association (UCGIA or simply UCG), Tucson, Arizona.
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United States in Prophecy
United States in Prophecy was the original title of a publication that became known by its longer name of United States and British Commonwealth in Prophecy and published in various editions and formats after 1945.
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Vayeira
Vayeira, Vayera, or (— Hebrew for "and He appeared," the first word in the parashah) is the fourth weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading.
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View of the Hebrews
View of the Hebrews is an 1823 book written by Ethan Smith, a United States Congregationalist minister, who argued that Native Americans were descended from the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel.
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Who is a Jew?
"Who is a Jew?" (מיהו יהודי) is a basic question about Jewish identity and considerations of Jewish self-identification.
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William H. Poole
William H. Poole, LL.D (died 1896) was a minister and prominent British Israelite known for his 1889 book Anglo-Israel: or the Saxon Race Proved to be the Lost Tribes of Israel.
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William Whiston
William Whiston (9 December 1667 – 22 August 1752) was an English theologian, historian, and mathematician, a leading figure in the popularisation of the ideas of Isaac Newton.
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10
10 (ten) is an even natural number following 9 and preceding 11.
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1975 in Prophecy!
1975 in Prophecy! is a digest-sized booklet warning of a then-upcoming nuclear war and subsequent enslavement of mankind, leading to the return of Jesus Christ as a benign dictator.
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2005 in Israel
Events in the year 2005 in Israel.
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Redirects here:
10 Lost Tribes, 10 lost tribes, Dutch Israelism, Lost Jews, Lost Ten Tribes, Lost Tribe of Israel, Lost Tribes of Israel, Lost ten tribes, Lost tribe of Israel, Lost tribes of Israel, Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, Ten Tribes, Ten lost tribes, Ten lost tribes of Israel, Ten tribes, These are the Lost Tribes of Israel, Tribe of David.
References
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten_Lost_Tribes