Beth-Cherem

Beth-Cherem

Beth-Cherem (d.i. Stätte des Weinberges), Berg bei Thekoa, jetzt der Frankenberg.


Pierer's Lexicon. 1857–1865.

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  • Cherem — For the same Hebrew word that means to devote or destroy, see Herem. For the Kohanic gift, see Hromim. Cherem (or ḥērem חרם), is the highest ecclesiastical censure in the Jewish community. It is the total exclusion of a person from the Jewish… …   Wikipedia

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  • WAR AND WARFARE — TO THE DESTRUCTION OF THE FIRST TEMPLE The methods of offensive and defensive warfare developed side by side in the Ancient Near East. The development of weapons was dependent upon the supply of raw materials, such as stone, metal, and wood; the… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

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  • EIN KEREM — (Heb. עֵין כֶּרֶם), village on the western edge of Jerusalem, identified with biblical beth cherem ; since 1949 part of the Jerusalem municipality. Early Christian tradition dating back to the sixth century identifies Ein Kerem as the birthplace… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

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  • RĀMA, AL- — Christian Arab and Druze village in Upper Galilee, Israel, at the foot of Mt. Ha Ari. Reported uninhabited and in ruins in 1729, the village thrived in the 20th century, and as in antiquity, is one of the principal olive growing centers in the c …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

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