Aramaean

  • 31Assyrian people — Assyrians redirects here. For other uses, see Assyrians (disambiguation). Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac people Sūrāyē / Sūryāyē / …

    Wikipedia

  • 32Aram (Biblical region) — Aram is the name of a region mentioned in the Bible located in central Syria, including where the city of Aleppo (aka Halab) now stands. Aram stretched from the Lebanon mountains eastward across the Euphrates, including the Habur valley in… …

    Wikipedia

  • 33alphabet — /al feuh bet , bit/, n. 1. the letters of a language in their customary order. 2. any system of characters or signs with which a language is written: the Greek alphabet. 3. any such system for representing the sounds of a language: the phonetic… …

    Universalium

  • 34Babylon — /bab euh leuhn, lon /, n. 1. an ancient city of SW Asia, on the Euphrates River, famed for its magnificence and culture: capital of Babylonia and later of the Chaldean empire. 2. any rich and magnificent city believed to be a place of excessive… …

    Universalium

  • 35Sennacherib — /seuh nak euhr ib/, n. died 681 B.C., king of Assyria 705 681. * * * died January 681 BC King of Assyria (r. 705/704–681 BC), son and successor of Sargon II. Between 703 and 689 he undertook six campaigns against Elam (southwestern Iran), which… …

    Universalium

  • 36Tiglath-pileser III — died 727 B.C., king of Assyria 745 727. * * * flourished 8th century BC King of Assyria (r. 745–727 BC) who led the last and greatest phase of Assyrian expansion. On taking the throne, he immediately set about strengthening Assyria. He subdivided …

    Universalium

  • 37Job — • One of the books of the Old Testament, and the chief personage in it Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Job     Job     † …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 38Сборная Иракского Курдистана по футболу — Конфедерация NF …

    Википедия

  • 39GOZAN — (Heb. גּוֹזָן; Akk. Guzana), an Aramaean city on the western shores of the Habor River, a tributary of the Euphrates. The site of Gozan, now Tell Halaf, was first excavated and explored by M. von Oppenheim (1911–19; 1929). Although Tell Halaf –… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 40Aramaic alphabet — Bilingual Greek and Aramaic inscription by the Mauryan emperor Ashoka the Great at Kandahar, 3rd century BC …

    Wikipedia