Ancient Tel Hebron- The Tombs of Jesse and Ruth

Ancient Tel Hebron- The Tombs of Jesse and Ruth

Пікірлер: 10

  • @conniecharley7086
    @conniecharley70864 жыл бұрын

    Jesse and Ruth gave us beautiful history to be written forever in the Bible.. The story of Ruth with her mother in law ls.loved by many. God had plans for Ruth he saved her so King David could become a great King in our Bible history ..

  • @ladymedic1
    @ladymedic110 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this fantastic video. I'm so grateful for what you have done here. I was so blessed to spend 3 months in Israel beginning Pesach of 2012 and this was one of the sites I was able to see. I thoroughly enjoyed your short documentary on the history of Jesse.

  • @phones961O2
    @phones961O212 жыл бұрын

    History like this is inspiring!

  • @ANANEDIM

    @ANANEDIM

    6 жыл бұрын

    bbbrazilpaheymmm.blogspot.com/2018/01/blog-post_14.html

  • @gwenmadison9945
    @gwenmadison99459 ай бұрын

    Am interested in this study of tel-hebron city. I would love more information on this

  • @ursulawieczorek7623
    @ursulawieczorek76232 жыл бұрын

    Ruth 🕯🌈 and Jesse 🕯🌈

  • @randywoodworth4028
    @randywoodworth40289 жыл бұрын

    the book of Ruth has always been one of my favorites of the old testament, a story of courage and love, of a brave woman who gave up everything to be with her mother in law, in a new land, who put her faith in God, as a result she is listed in the ancestry of the Messiah, alongside other women of faith such as Sarah, Rahab, and many others.

  • @Jordan-fy8ut
    @Jordan-fy8ut6 жыл бұрын

    This is a muslim/Palestinian structure - it has nothing to do with white european or american Israeli zionists..

  • @hebronvideo

    @hebronvideo

    6 жыл бұрын

    One of the earliest known references to the tomb comes from an unnamed student of the Ramban who visited the site between 1289 and 1290. He wrote of visiting the "cave of Jesse's grave on a hilltop near the Cave of Machpela and the ancient Jewish Cemetery of Hebron." His words were reprinted in a collection of travel diaries of medieval Jewish travelers entitled Maasot Eretz Yisrael edited by bibliographer Abraham Yaari. The Jewish traveler Yaakov HaShaliach mentions visiting "the grave of Jesse, father of David in Hebron" in the year 1235, but he does not specify the burial place. These comments were reprinted by the historian Julius Eisenstein in his 1927 book Otzar Masa'oth, an anthology of itineraries by Jewish travelers. Meshulam de Volterra, the Italian Jewish traveler who began his journey in 1481, wrote about the site in his journal. It has been reprinted in Elkan Nathan Adler's book Jewish Travelers in the Middle Ages: 19 Firsthand Accounts as well as in a book by Abraham Moshe Lunz and in and Avraham Yaari's seminal Zikhronot Eretz Yisrael, a Hebrew work in two volumes which runs to over 1,200 pages. In 1522 Rabbi Moshe Bassola wrote, "at the summit of the mountain opposite Hebron is the burial place of Jesse, David's father. It has a handsome building with a small window that looks down on the burial cave. They say that once they threw a cat through the window and it emerged from the hole in the Cave of the Patriarchs. The distance between them is half a mile." Rabbi Basola's travel journal has been reprinted in In Zion and Jerusalem: The Itinerary of Rabbi Moses Basola 1512-1523 edited by Abraham David. The full text can be viewed here. Two Karaite travelers wrote of the site. Their names were Samuel ben David of Crimea who wrote in 1642 and Benjamin Ben-Eliyahu wrote wrote in 1785. The 1537 book Yihus HaAvos V'Neviim (Lineage of the Patriarch and the Prophets) describes the tomb as "a handsome building up on the mount, where Jesse, the King David's father is buried." It includes a drawing of the site, and notes an "ancient Israelite burial ground" nearby and Crusader courtyard. For full article see here: en.hebron.org.il/history/328

  • @shynijames5613

    @shynijames5613

    3 жыл бұрын

    You ediot close ur ugly mouth.Jesus save us and we will follow the new and old testament.