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JERUSALEM COLOPHON

  • Jerusalem Colophon
  • The Jerusalem Colophon is a colophon found in a number of New Testament manuscripts, including Λ (039), 20, 153, 157, 164, 215, 262, 300, 376, 428, 565

    Jerusalem Colophon

    Jerusalem_Colophon

  • Colophon (publishing)
  • Brief statement of information about a book

    In publishing, a colophon (/ˈkɒləfən, -fɒn/) is a brief statement containing information about the publication of a book such as an "imprint" (the place

    Colophon (publishing)

    Colophon (publishing)

    Colophon_(publishing)

  • Jerusalem (Moore novel)
  • Novel by English author Alan Moore (2016)

    set in the Boroughs, the most ancient neighbourhood in Northampton. The colophon states that the book is based on a true story; it concerns a large collection

    Jerusalem (Moore novel)

    Jerusalem_(Moore_novel)

  • Caesarean text-type
  • New Testament text type

    New Testament. Some of the Caesarean manuscripts have the so-called Jerusalem Colophon. The Caesarean text-type was discovered and named by Burnett Hillman

    Caesarean text-type

    Caesarean text-type

    Caesarean_text-type

  • Minuscule 1071
  • New Testament manuscript

    Matthew and Mark there are contained two colophon's, the first of which after Matthew is known as the "Jerusalem colophon", which states that the manuscript

    Minuscule 1071

    Minuscule_1071

  • First Crusade
  • 1096–1099 Christian re-conquest of the Holy Land

    Caliphate in the 7th century—to Christian rule. By the 11th century, although Jerusalem had then been ruled by Muslims for hundreds of years, the practices of

    First Crusade

    First Crusade

    First_Crusade

  • Minuscule 157
  • Greek minuscule of the New Testament, circa 1122

    appointed in Acts 6:5. It has the famous Jerusalem Colophon ("copied and corrected from the ancient manuscripts of Jerusalem preserved on the Holy Mountain")

    Minuscule 157

    Minuscule 157

    Minuscule_157

  • Codex Hierosolymitanus
  • 11th-century Greek manuscript

    defining feature of the manuscript 's paleography is the explicit scribal colophon located near the final folio of the volume(folio 120v). In this final folio

    Codex Hierosolymitanus

    Codex_Hierosolymitanus

  • Minuscule 901
  • New Testament manuscript

    end of each of the Gospels with numbers of στιχοι. It has so called Jerusalem Colophon. The Greek text of the codex is a representative of the Byzantine

    Minuscule 901

    Minuscule_901

  • Mandaeism
  • Gnostic religion

    or Left Ginza, and the Genzā Yeminā or Right Ginza. By consulting the colophons in the Left Ginza, Jorunn J. Buckley has identified an uninterrupted chain

    Mandaeism

    Mandaeism

    Mandaeism

  • Aimery of Limoges
  • Latin Patriarch of Antioch in the 12th century

    contemporary Antiochene Armenian-language colophon with translation to support this. The scribe of the colophon is one Yohannēs, who is favourable to Bohemond

    Aimery of Limoges

    Aimery of Limoges

    Aimery_of_Limoges

  • Leningrad Codex
  • 11th-century Hebrew Bible manuscript

    using the Masoretic Text and Tiberian vocalization. According to its colophon, it was made in Cairo in AD 1008 (or possibly 1009). Some have proposed

    Leningrad Codex

    Leningrad Codex

    Leningrad_Codex

  • Minuscule 428
  • New Testament manuscript

    vellum leaf and commentary of Theophylact. It has the famous the Jerusalem Colophon in Gospel of Matthew. It contains subscriptions like codex 262. It

    Minuscule 428

    Minuscule_428

  • Minuscule 215
  • New Testament manuscript

    and pictures (later hand). It has the famous Jerusalem Colophon ("from the ancient manuscripts of Jerusalem"). The manuscript is a duplicate of the codex

    Minuscule 215

    Minuscule_215

  • Minuscule 164
  • New Testament manuscript

    were added by a later hand. It has the famous Jerusalem Colophon ("from the ancient manuscripts of Jerusalem"). Aland the Greek text of the codex did not

    Minuscule 164

    Minuscule_164

  • Minuscule 262
  • New Testament manuscript

    at the end of each Gospel. It has the famous Jerusalem Colophon ("from the ancient manuscripts of Jerusalem"). The Greek text of the codex is a representative

    Minuscule 262

    Minuscule_262

  • Minuscule 922
  • New Testament manuscript

    Tischendorfianus III and Minuscule 566). These subscriptions were called Jerusalem Colophon. The Greek text of the codex is a representative of the Byzantine

    Minuscule 922

    Minuscule 922

    Minuscule_922

  • Minuscule 718
  • New Testament manuscript

    church lessons marked), Synaxarion, Menologion, and subscriptions (Jerusalem Colophon). It contains many marginal notes. The Greek text of the codex is

    Minuscule 718

    Minuscule_718

  • Minuscule 566
  • New Testament manuscript

    the Ammonian Sections, (not the Eusebian Canons). It has the famous Jerusalem Colophon : ευαγγελιον κατα ματθαιον εγραφη και αντεβληθη εκ των ιεροσολυμοις

    Minuscule 566

    Minuscule_566

  • Codex Tischendorfianus III
  • New Testament manuscript

    are written in a usual way. In the end of each Gospel stands the Jerusalem Colophon. The text is divided according to the κεφαλαια (chapters), whose numbers

    Codex Tischendorfianus III

    Codex Tischendorfianus III

    Codex_Tischendorfianus_III

  • Minuscule 829
  • New Testament manuscript

    at the end of each of the Gospels, and stichoi. It has so called Jerusalem Colophon at the end Gospel of Mark. The Greek text of the codex is a representative

    Minuscule 829

    Minuscule_829

  • Minuscule 376
  • New Testament manuscript

    each Gospel, subscriptions at the end of each Gospel, and the famous Jerusalem Colophon. Text of Matthew 16:2b–3 (signs of the times) is omitted, text of

    Minuscule 376

    Minuscule_376

  • Minuscule 565
  • Minuscule Greek manuscript of the New Testament

    κεφαλαια) are placed before each of the four Gospels. It has the famous Jerusalem Colophon. The manuscript is similar to Beratinus 2 (Minuscule 1143). The Greek

    Minuscule 565

    Minuscule 565

    Minuscule_565

  • Kebra Nagast
  • 14th-century text about the Solomonic dynasty in Ethiopia

    and others.' referring to the Chalcedonian Schism." According to the colophon attached to most of the existing copies, the Kebra Nagast originally was

    Kebra Nagast

    Kebra Nagast

    Kebra_Nagast

  • Minuscule 1187
  • New Testament manuscript

    pages. It has subscriptions at the end of each Gospel, with so called Jerusalem Colophon. According to Hermann von Soden the manuscript was prepared for liturgical

    Minuscule 1187

    Minuscule 1187

    Minuscule_1187

  • Minuscule 300
  • New Testament manuscript

    Gospels are similar to those seen in Minuscule 262. It has the famous Jerusalem Colophon. The commentary text is considered to be close to that seen in Minuscule

    Minuscule 300

    Minuscule_300

  • Minuscule 899
  • New Testament manuscript

    the Jewish Gospel in a scholion at Matthew 12:40. It contains the Jerusalem Colophon after each of the gospels. The Greek text of the codex is representative

    Minuscule 899

    Minuscule_899

  • Minuscule 686
  • New Testament manuscript

    subscriptions at the end of each of the Gospels of Matthew and Mark (Jerusalem Colophon), numbered stichoi, Synaxarion, and Menologion. According to Scrivener

    Minuscule 686

    Minuscule_686

  • Minuscule 20
  • New Testament manuscript

    Matthew, Luke, and John, Victorinus in Mark). It contains the famous Jerusalem Colophon. The text of the Pericope Adulterae (John 7:53-8:11) is placed at

    Minuscule 20

    Minuscule_20

  • Codex Cairensis
  • Hebrew codex of the Prophets ascribed to masorete Ben-Asher

    indicate an 11th-century date rather than the 895 CE date written into its colophon. It contains the books of the Former Prophets (Joshua, Judges, Samuel,

    Codex Cairensis

    Codex Cairensis

    Codex_Cairensis

  • Jerusalem Crown
  • Printed edition of the Tanakh printed in Jerusalem in 2001

    The Jerusalem Crown (Hebrew: כתר ירושלים, romanized: Keter Yerushalayim) is a printed edition of the Hebrew Bible printed in Jerusalem in 2000, and based

    Jerusalem Crown

    Jerusalem_Crown

  • Aleppo Codex
  • 10th-century Hebrew Bible manuscript

    Paul E. Kahle to be a product of the ben Asher scriptorium. However, its colophon says only that it was corrected from manuscripts written by ben Asher;

    Aleppo Codex

    Aleppo Codex

    Aleppo_Codex

  • Obadiah the Proselyte
  • 12th-century Italian Jewish musician

    of evidence for reconstructing his own varied output came from a single colophon leaf, all that remains of a prayer-book, now preserved in the Hebrew Union

    Obadiah the Proselyte

    Obadiah_the_Proselyte

  • Principality of Antioch
  • Crusader state in the Levant from 1098 to 1268

    principality was much smaller than the County of Edessa or the Kingdom of Jerusalem. It extended around the northeastern edge of the Mediterranean, bordering

    Principality of Antioch

    Principality of Antioch

    Principality_of_Antioch

  • Khanmeti Lectionary
  • Manuscript

    nationale de France (BnF, Géorgien 30), while the folio containing the colophon of Ioane-Zosime, the manuscript’s third binder, is kept in the Birmingham

    Khanmeti Lectionary

    Khanmeti Lectionary

    Khanmeti_Lectionary

  • Schism of 1552
  • Division of the Church of the East

    evidence available in the colophons of a number of sixteenth-century East Syrian manuscripts. The evidence from these colophons, deployed by David Wilmshurst

    Schism of 1552

    Schism_of_1552

  • Tychicus
  • Companion of the Apostle Paul

    notes that different traditions make Tychicus out to be the Bishop of Colophon, Chalcedon or Neapolis in Cyprus. A pseudepigraphal list of the seventy

    Tychicus

    Tychicus

    Tychicus

  • Bald's Leechbook
  • Medieval collection of medical remedies

    Elias of Jerusalem to Alfred the Great, which is the basis for the book's association with the Alfredian court. f. 109 A metrical Latin colophon naming

    Bald's Leechbook

    Bald's Leechbook

    Bald's_Leechbook

  • Codex Cyprius
  • New Testament manuscript

    the reverse of page 267, there is a colophon (subscription) inserted by a second hand. According to this colophon the manuscript was written by a scribe

    Codex Cyprius

    Codex Cyprius

    Codex_Cyprius

  • Codex Sinaiticus
  • 4th-century handwritten Bible copy in Greek

    or seventh century, many alterations were made (א‎b) – according to a colophon at the end of the book of Esdras and Esther, the source of these alterations

    Codex Sinaiticus

    Codex Sinaiticus

    Codex_Sinaiticus

  • Damascus Crown
  • 13th-century Hebrew codex of the Bible

    Israel, in Jerusalem, under a public trust. The manuscript is not to be confused with the Damascus Pentateuch. According to its colophon, the Damascus

    Damascus Crown

    Damascus Crown

    Damascus_Crown

  • Seventy disciples
  • Early students of Jesus mentioned in the Gospel of Luke

    bishop of Berytus Apollos, bishop of Cæsarea Cephas, bishop of Iconium of Colophon Sosthenes, bishop of Colophonia Tychicus, bishop of Colophonia Epaphroditus

    Seventy disciples

    Seventy disciples

    Seventy_disciples

  • Erhard Reuwich
  • 15th-century Dutch artist and printer

    journey, including a crocodile, camel, and unicorn, were also included. The colophon of the book is a lively coat-of-arms of the current Archbishop of Mainz

    Erhard Reuwich

    Erhard Reuwich

    Erhard_Reuwich

  • Haggadah
  • Text that sets forth the order of the Passover Seder

    Guadalajara, Spain; however, this is mostly conjecture, as there is no printer's colophon. The oldest confirmed printed Haggadah was printed in Soncino, Lombardy

    Haggadah

    Haggadah

    Haggadah

  • Book of Esther
  • Book of the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old Testament

    of Ptolemy, one of the residents of Jerusalem. — (NRSV) It is unclear to which version of Greek Esther this colophon refers, and who exactly are the figures

    Book of Esther

    Book of Esther

    Book_of_Esther

  • De Mulieribus Claris
  • 1361–62 biographies by Giovanni Boccaccio

    queen of Colchis and lover of Jason in the "Argonautica" 18. Arachne of Colophon 19 and 20. Orithyia and Antiope, queens of the Amazons 21. Erythraea or

    De Mulieribus Claris

    De Mulieribus Claris

    De_Mulieribus_Claris

  • Ginza Rabba
  • Central religious text of Mandaeism

    their distinct genre, grammar, and according to their colophon evidence. The GL has its own colophon, as do the first thirteen tractates of the GR. Each

    Ginza Rabba

    Ginza Rabba

    Ginza_Rabba

  • Oğuz (city)
  • City and municipality in Oghuz, Azerbaijan

    reference to the abundance of roses that naturally grow in this place. A colophon on Armenian manuscript dating to 1466 suggests possibly earlier bilingual

    Oğuz (city)

    Oğuz (city)

    Oğuz_(city)

  • Tamar I
  • Queen of Georgia from 1184 to 1213

    was even named as a saint in her lifetime in a bilingual Greco-Georgian colophon attached to the manuscript of the Vani Gospels. The idealization of Tamar

    Tamar I

    Tamar I

    Tamar_I

  • Romaniote Jews
  • Greek-speaking Jewish community

    "Romaniote", only with the science of Paleography, if they do not contain a Colophon (publishing) or other characteristics of identification. During World War

    Romaniote Jews

    Romaniote Jews

    Romaniote_Jews

  • Toros Roslin
  • Armenian artist (1210-1270)

    particular. The colophons in Roslin's manuscripts permit scholars to partially reconstruct the world in which he lived in. In these colophons Roslin appears

    Toros Roslin

    Toros Roslin

    Toros_Roslin

  • Yemenite Jews
  • Jewish ethnic group

    An important note of the treatment of Jews by Tahirids is found in the colophon of a Jewish manuscript from Yemen in 1505, when the last Tahirid Sultan

    Yemenite Jews

    Yemenite Jews

    Yemenite_Jews

  • Gospel of Mark
  • Book of the New Testament

    to serve (10:35–45) Blind Bartimaeus (10:46–52) 3. Events in Jerusalem Entering Jerusalem (11:1–11) Cursing the fig tree (11:12–14,20–24) Temple incident

    Gospel of Mark

    Gospel of Mark

    Gospel_of_Mark

  • Crusading movement
  • Framework of Christian holy war

    chivalric romance. The earliest Armenian reference to the Crusades—a 1098 colophon to a legal text—speaks of the arrival of "the western nation of heroes"

    Crusading movement

    Crusading movement

    Crusading_movement

  • Psalms
  • Book of sacred songs in the Hebrew Bible

    work on temple-period signs. (See Moshe ben Asher's 'Song of the Vine' colophon to the Codex Cairensis). Several attempts have been made to decode the

    Psalms

    Psalms

    Psalms

  • Masliah ben Solomon ha-Cohen
  • Gaon of the Palestinian Academy (died 1139)

    the Indigenous Israel Gaonate since the middle of the 11th century. A colophon from 1184 recorded that Masliah had a brother named Sadoq and a sister

    Masliah ben Solomon ha-Cohen

    Masliah ben Solomon ha-Cohen

    Masliah_ben_Solomon_ha-Cohen

  • Scribe
  • Person who writes or copies manuscripts

    manuscript in gold ink on dark blue paper, stating his purpose in the colophon as "to ensure the spiritual enlightenment of his departed mother." Creating

    Scribe

    Scribe

    Scribe

  • Arish
  • City in Sinai, Egypt

    Jorsha, 'noseless', an analogue of Greek Rinocorura. A Coptic-Arabic colophon dating to 1616 mentions the writer "Solomon of Shorpo, son of Michael,

    Arish

    Arish

    Arish

  • Historiography of the Crusades
  • Study of history-writing of the crusades

    involved competing and evolving interpretations since the capture of Jerusalem in 1099 until the present day. The religious idealism, use of martial

    Historiography of the Crusades

    Historiography of the Crusades

    Historiography_of_the_Crusades

  • Kalīla wa-Dimna
  • Arabic collection of fables

    Creation date: Hijri: 25 Rabīʿ II 755/Gregorian: 19 May 1354. Dated in colophon, fol. 152v. Manuscript has some parts missing (refer to Kalila wa-Dimna

    Kalīla wa-Dimna

    Kalīla wa-Dimna

    Kalīla_wa-Dimna

  • Koren Type
  • the Karaite community in Cairo, the earliest Medieval manuscript with a colophon, written in 895 CE in Tiberias. Following the Hebrew University's decision

    Koren Type

    Koren_Type

  • Matt Chun
  • Australian author and illustrator

    Financial Review. Retrieved 11 May 2026. Rundle, Guy (24 April 2026). "Colophon". Spec: Commentary. Retrieved 10 May 2026. Dunlop, Tim (27 April 2026)

    Matt Chun

    Matt_Chun

  • Mandaean Book of John
  • Mandaean holy book ascribed to John the Baptist

    1973. In 2004, Salah Choheili finished a copy of the Book of John. The colophon has been translated into English by Gelbert & Lofts (2017). In the early

    Mandaean Book of John

    Mandaean_Book_of_John

  • Book of Muhammad's Ladder
  • Account of Muhammad's Israʾ and Miʿraj

    Bonaventura da Siena to translate the Castilian into Latin and French. A colophon indicates that he completed the French translation in 1264. The Castilian

    Book of Muhammad's Ladder

    Book of Muhammad's Ladder

    Book_of_Muhammad's_Ladder

  • Testamentum Domini
  • 5th-century Christian text; church order

    Patriarch of Antioch. His text is that of a 17th-century MS. at Mosul, the colophon of which says that the Syriac text was translated from the original Greek

    Testamentum Domini

    Testamentum_Domini

  • Al-Ousta Codex
  • 14th-century Hebrew Bible codex

    visiting minister from Yemen and minter of the king's coins. Based on its colophon, one whose name was Sar-Shalom the nasi, the presumed head of the Sephardic

    Al-Ousta Codex

    Al-Ousta Codex

    Al-Ousta_Codex

  • Caesarea in Palaestina (diocese)
  • Titular see of the Catholic Church

    Testimonies to his zeal and care in this work are to be found in the colophons of biblical manuscripts. Jerome's "De Viris Illustribus" (75) says that

    Caesarea in Palaestina (diocese)

    Caesarea in Palaestina (diocese)

    Caesarea_in_Palaestina_(diocese)

  • Ephesus
  • Ancient Greek city in Anatolia

    Egypt. After Lysimachus had destroyed the nearby cities of Lebedos and Colophon in 292 BC, he relocated their inhabitants to the new city. Ephesus revolted

    Ephesus

    Ephesus

    Ephesus

  • Morgan Beatus
  • 10th-century illuminated manuscript

    is identified as the work's maker by means of a colophon on f. 293 and a memento on f. 233. The colophon also provides a cryptic date and references to

    Morgan Beatus

    Morgan Beatus

    Morgan_Beatus

  • Christian Palestinian Aramaic
  • Melkite Aramaic

    Michaelis based on the appearance of the Arabic name of Jerusalem, al-Quds, in the colophon of a Gospel lectionary of 1030 AD (today Vat. sir. 19). It

    Christian Palestinian Aramaic

    Christian Palestinian Aramaic

    Christian_Palestinian_Aramaic

  • Star of David
  • Jewish cultural and religious symbol

    printed in Prague in 1512, a large hexagram appears on the cover. In the colophon is written: "Each man beneath his flag according to the house of their

    Star of David

    Star of David

    Star_of_David

  • List of Hebrew Bible manuscripts
  • 9:12–10:18). and dated by colophon to 920-950 CE. Codex Cairensis (Prophets), pointed by Moses Ben Asher, dated by a colophon 895 CE, contradicted by radiocarbon

    List of Hebrew Bible manuscripts

    List of Hebrew Bible manuscripts

    List_of_Hebrew_Bible_manuscripts

  • Armenian illuminated manuscripts
  • Armenian decorated documents

    impressive that certain inaccuracies in the design go unnoticed”. The colophon of a manuscript produced in 1318 at Erzincan bears the following content:

    Armenian illuminated manuscripts

    Armenian illuminated manuscripts

    Armenian_illuminated_manuscripts

  • Midrash HaGadol
  • 14th century compilation of midrashim

    Library (Or. 1207), also of Yemenite Jewish provenance, as noted in its colophon. In the Introduction to the Midrash HaGadol (on Numbers, Mossad Harav Kook

    Midrash HaGadol

    Midrash HaGadol

    Midrash_HaGadol

  • Shuphalishoy
  • from the original on 2022-04-28. Retrieved 2022-04-28. Gosh, Mkhitar. "Colophon". www.attalus.org. Archived from the original on 2021-01-06. Retrieved

    Shuphalishoy

    Shuphalishoy

  • Holiness code
  • Leviticus chapters 17–26

    regarded as the later version of the two. Chapter 19, which ends in a colophon, has a similarity with the Ten Commandments (Ethical Decalogue), although

    Holiness code

    Holiness code

    Holiness_code

  • Printer's mark
  • Symbol used as a trademark by printers

    printers' marks with an article on the history of each mark. Bookplate Colophon Factory mark Merchant's mark Union label Roberts, William (1893). Printers'

    Printer's mark

    Printer's mark

    Printer's_mark

  • Georgian manuscripts of Saint Paul's letters
  • tutelage, the lyre of this power, Paul, be my ally, Amen." Therefore, the colophon was made in 1700, and the author is King Vakhtang VI of Kartli. The manuscript

    Georgian manuscripts of Saint Paul's letters

    Georgian manuscripts of Saint Paul's letters

    Georgian_manuscripts_of_Saint_Paul's_letters

  • Abas (Catholicos)
  • Head of Caucasian Albanian Church in the late 6th century

    of Katarovank which was in ruins since days of Sanesan. According to a colophon, he recovered some relics of St. Grigoris, St. Stephen, St. Varus, Mammes

    Abas (Catholicos)

    Abas_(Catholicos)

  • Avesta
  • Zoroastrian compendium of sacred literature

    into which sections of the Visperad and Vendidad are interleaved. The colophon of K1 (K=Copenhagen) identifies its place and year of completion to Cambay

    Avesta

    Avesta

    Avesta

  • History of the Armenian alphabet
  • uncial and Cyrillic scripts. The term Erkat'agir first appears in the colophon of the Gospel, dated 911. In accordance with the accepted classification

    History of the Armenian alphabet

    History_of_the_Armenian_alphabet

  • Samaritan Pentateuch
  • Samaritan version of the Torah

    tashqil by scholars, which Samaritans consider to be Abishua's ancient colophon: I am Abishua, the son of Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron

    Samaritan Pentateuch

    Samaritan Pentateuch

    Samaritan_Pentateuch

  • Deism
  • Belief in a god based on rational thought

    2017). "2500 Years of Palaeoecology: A Note on the Work of Xenophanes of Colophon (Circa 570-475 BCE)" (PDF). Journal of Geography, Environment and Earth

    Deism

    Deism

    Deism

  • Cartography of Palestine
  • Israel (1948 onwards) John Speed map of Canaan Nolin map Cartography of Jerusalem Travelogues of Palestine Rubin 2018, p. 287-288: "Holy Land cartography

    Cartography of Palestine

    Cartography_of_Palestine

  • List of vulnerable insects
  • globosus) San Joaquin dune beetle (Coelus gracilis) Colophon cameroni Colophon neli Colophon stokoei Colophon westwoodi Blind cave beetle (Glacicavicola bathysciodes)

    List of vulnerable insects

    List_of_vulnerable_insects

  • Authorship of the Bible
  • Modern scholarly approaches to biblical authorship and textual composition

    exemplar and copy visually, and annotated corrections inline or in margins. Colophons in some traditions recorded scribe, place, and date, and the Masorah later

    Authorship of the Bible

    Authorship_of_the_Bible

  • Peshitta
  • Standard Syriac Christian edition of the Bible

    manuscript containing the 14 Pauline Epistles with some lacunae, dated by a colophon British Library, Add. 14455 – a 6th-century heavily damaged manuscript

    Peshitta

    Peshitta

    Peshitta

  • History of the Quran
  • not to delegitimize the other qir’at, but to eliminate that, which the colophon labels as errors, found in Qur’anic texts used in state schools. To do

    History of the Quran

    History of the Quran

    History_of_the_Quran

  • Menachem Katz
  • (born 1955) is an Israeli Talmudic scholar whose work focuses on the Jerusalem Talmud (Palestinian Talmud) and digital humanities. He has been involved

    Menachem Katz

    Menachem_Katz

  • Duns Scotus
  • Scottish Franciscan friar and philosopher (c. 1265/66–1308)

    authors, Francis Bacon reported it in his Historia vitae et mortis. The colophon of Codex 66 of Merton College, Oxford, says that Scotus was also at Cambridge

    Duns Scotus

    Duns Scotus

    Duns_Scotus

  • List of vulnerable arthropods
  • globosus) San Joaquin dune beetle (Coelus gracilis) Colophon cameroni Colophon neli Colophon stokoei Colophon westwoodi Blind cave beetle (Glacicavicola bathysciodes)

    List of vulnerable arthropods

    List_of_vulnerable_arthropods

  • Stavelot Bible
  • Romanesque illuminated manuscript Bible in two volumes

    "Jerusalem was under attack by many peoples", in other words during the First Crusade. Goderannus had written the Lobbes Bible, which another colophon

    Stavelot Bible

    Stavelot Bible

    Stavelot_Bible

  • Hattusa
  • Capital of the Hittite Empire

    Palgrave Macmillan, 1998 Torri, Giulia, "The phrase ṬUPPUURUḪatti in Colophons from Ḫattuša and the Work of the Scribe Ḫanikkuili", Altorientalische

    Hattusa

    Hattusa

    Hattusa

  • On Weights and Measures
  • Literary work composed by Epiphanius of Salamis

    British Museum in London. The older was found in Egypt and, according to the colophon, was written in the Seleucid era, in "nine-hundred and sixty-[...]" (with

    On Weights and Measures

    On_Weights_and_Measures

  • Georgian scripts
  • Three related alphabets used to write Georgian

    ligature of these letters produced a new letter in Nuskhuri, ⴓ uni. A colophon of King David IV in Nuskhuri. Note: Without proper font support, you may

    Georgian scripts

    Georgian scripts

    Georgian_scripts

  • Stained glass windows of Chartres Cathedral
  • chancellor of the School of Chartres, handed down by John of Salisbury in colophon 400 of his Metalogicon - "Bernard of Chartres said that we are like dwarves

    Stained glass windows of Chartres Cathedral

    Stained glass windows of Chartres Cathedral

    Stained_glass_windows_of_Chartres_Cathedral

  • Damgalnuna
  • Mesopotamian goddess

    concludes that it might have been some sort of plague or natural disaster. The colophon of the Neo-Babylonian copy states that the contents of the tablet were

    Damgalnuna

    Damgalnuna

    Damgalnuna

  • William of Santo Stefano
  • the Vatican, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, MS lat. 4852. A marginal colophon dedicates the work to William. William's views on the vernacular were advanced

    William of Santo Stefano

    William of Santo Stefano

    William_of_Santo_Stefano

  • Incense offering in rabbinic literature
  • Rabbinic views on the incense formula used in Jewish ritual

    Sidrei Mishnah' (in Hebrew). Vol. 1. Jerusalem: Eshkol. OCLC 233308344. Overduin, Floris (2014). Nicander of Colophon's Theriaca. Leiden: Brill Publishers

    Incense offering in rabbinic literature

    Incense_offering_in_rabbinic_literature

  • Epistle of Jude
  • Book of the New Testament

    early apostolic age of c. 50–70 before the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem; if the letter reflects "early catholicism" and the beginnings of an organized

    Epistle of Jude

    Epistle of Jude

    Epistle_of_Jude

AI & ChatGPT searchs for online references containing JERUSALEM COLOPHON

JERUSALEM COLOPHON

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JERUSALEM COLOPHON

  • HOSHA'NA
  • Male

    Hebrew

    HOSHA'NA

    (הוֹשׁע-נא) Hebrew unisex name derived from hosha'na, HOSHA'NA means "deliver us." In the bible, this was the cry of the people who recognized Jesus as the Messiah when he entered Jerusalem.

    HOSHA'NA

  • Salah Al Din |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Salah Al Din |

    Righteousness of the faith, Name of the Muslim leader who liberated jerusalem from the crusaders

    Salah Al Din |

  • ANNA
  • Female

    English

    ANNA

     Latin form of Greek Hanna, ANNA means "favor; grace." In the New Testament bible, this is the name of a prophetess in Jerusalem.

    ANNA

  • Bethann
  • Girl/Female

    Hebrew

    Bethann

    a village near Jerusalem where Jesus visited Mary; Martha and Lazarus.

    Bethann

  • Ariel
  • Boy/Male

    American, Australian, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Jewish, Shakespearean

    Ariel

    Lion of God; Name for Jerusalem

    Ariel

  • Arel
  • Boy/Male

    Hebrew

    Arel

    Sprite; lion of God. A biblical alternate name for Jerusalem. Name of a prankish spirit in...

    Arel

  • Arial
  • Girl/Female

    Hebrew Welsh

    Arial

    Sprite; lion of God. A biblical alternate name for Jerusalem. Name of a prankish spirit in...

    Arial

  • AZAL
  • Male

    English

    AZAL

    Anglicized form of Hebrew Atsel, AZAL means "noble." In the bible, this is the name of a place near Jerusalem, and a descendant of Saul.

    AZAL

  • Salah Al Din
  • Boy/Male

    Indian

    Salah Al Din

    Righteousness of the faith, Name of the Muslim leader who liberated jerusalem from the crusaders

    Salah Al Din

  • AZEL
  • Male

    English

    AZEL

    Anglicized form of Hebrew Atsel, AZEL means "noble." In the bible, this is the name of a place near Jerusalem, and a descendant of Saul.

    AZEL

  • Bethani
  • Girl/Female

    Hebrew

    Bethani

    a village near Jerusalem where Jesus visited Mary; Martha and Lazarus.

    Bethani

  • Jerusalem
  • Biblical

    Jerusalem

    vision of peace,the habitation of peace,

    Jerusalem

  • Ariel
  • Boy/Male

    Hebrew American Biblical Shakespearean

    Ariel

    Sprite; lion of God. A biblical alternate name for Jerusalem. Name of a prankish spirit in...

    Ariel

  • ATSEL
  • Male

    Hebrew

    ATSEL

    (אָצֵל) Hebrew name ATSEL means "noble." In the bible, this is the name of a place near Jerusalem, and a descendant of Saul.

    ATSEL

  • Jerusalem
  • Boy/Male

    Biblical

    Jerusalem

    Vision of peace.

    Jerusalem

  • HOSANNA
  • Female

    English

    HOSANNA

    Anglicized form of Greek Hōsanna, HOSANNA means "deliver us." In the bible, this was the cry of the people who recognized Jesus as the Messiah when he entered Jerusalem.

    HOSANNA

  • MNASON
  • Male

    Greek

    MNASON

    (Μνάσων) Greek name, possibly MNASON means "remembering." In the bible, this is the name of a Christian from Cyprus whom Paul stayed with in Jerusalem.

    MNASON

  • Bethanee
  • Girl/Female

    Hebrew

    Bethanee

    a village near Jerusalem where Jesus visited Mary; Martha and Lazarus.

    Bethanee

  • SalahAlDin
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Muslim

    SalahAlDin

    Righteousness of the Faith; Name of the Muslim Leader who Liberated Jerusalem from the Crusaders

    SalahAlDin

  • Bethanie
  • Girl/Female

    Hebrew

    Bethanie

    a village near Jerusalem where Jesus visited Mary; Martha and Lazarus.

    Bethanie

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JERUSALEM COLOPHON

Online names & meanings

  • Asudh
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Asudh

    Not Pure; Impure

  • Cillan
  • Boy/Male

    Irish

    Cillan

    War; strife.

  • Ashrafia
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic

    Ashrafia

    Noble

  • AMIKA
  • Female

    Esperanto

    AMIKA

    Esperanto name AMIKA means "friendly."

  • Ibadullah
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic

    Ibadullah

    Servants of God

  • Pantxike
  • Girl/Female

    Latin

    Pantxike

    Free.

  • Sivagankai
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Tamil

    Sivagankai

    Goddess Amman

  • Ziare
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Hindu, Indian, Muslim

    Ziare

    Handsome

  • ELIAURES
  • Male

    Arthurian

    ELIAURES

    , to whom God is father.

  • Aneri
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian, Jain

    Aneri

    Totally Different

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AI searchs for Acronyms & meanings containing JERUSALEM COLOPHON

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Other words and meanings similar to

JERUSALEM COLOPHON

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing JERUSALEM COLOPHON

JERUSALEM COLOPHON

  • Zion
  • n.

    A hill in Jerusalem, which, after the capture of that city by the Israelites, became the royal residence of David and his successors.

  • Swedenborgian
  • n.

    One who holds the doctrines of the New Jerusalem church, as taught by Emanuel Swedenborg, a Swedish philosopher and religious writer, who was born a. d. 1688 and died 1772. Swedenborg claimed to have intercourse with the spiritual world, through the opening of his spiritual senses in 1745. He taught that the Lord Jesus Christ, as comprehending in himself all the fullness of the Godhead, is the one only God, and that there is a spiritual sense to the Scriptures, which he (Swedenborg) was able to reveal, because he saw the correspondence between natural and spiritual things.

  • Templar
  • n.

    One of a religious and military order first established at Jerusalem, in the early part of the 12th century, for the protection of pilgrims and of the Holy Sepulcher. These Knights Templars, or Knights of the Temple, were so named because they occupied an apartment of the palace of Bladwin II. in Jerusalem, near the Temple.

  • Tophet
  • n.

    A place lying east or southeast of Jerusalem, in the valley of Hinnom.

  • Hadji
  • n.

    A Greek or Armenian who has visited the holy sepulcher at Jerusalem.

  • Sea
  • n.

    A great brazen laver in the temple at Jerusalem; -- so called from its size.

  • Zion
  • n.

    The heavenly Jerusalem; heaven.

  • Artichoke
  • n.

    See Jerusalem artichoke.

  • Catholicos
  • n.

    The spiritual head of the Armenian church, who resides at Etchmiadzin, Russia, and has ecclesiastical jurisdiction over, and consecrates the holy oil for, the Armenians of Russia, Turkey, and Persia, including the Patriarchs of Constantinople, Jerusalem, and Sis.

  • Temple
  • n.

    The edifice erected at Jerusalem for the worship of Jehovah.

  • Sanctuary
  • n.

    The most retired part of the temple at Jerusalem, called the Holy of Holies, in which was kept the ark of the covenant, and into which no person was permitted to enter except the high priest, and he only once a year, to intercede for the people; also, the most sacred part of the tabernacle; also, the temple at Jerusalem.

  • Calvary
  • n.

    The place where Christ was crucified, on a small hill outside of Jerusalem.

  • Jerusalem
  • n.

    The chief city of Palestine, intimately associated with the glory of the Jewish nation, and the life and death of Jesus Christ.

  • Aceldama
  • n.

    The potter's field, said to have lain south of Jerusalem, purchased with the bribe which Judas took for betraying his Master, and therefore called the field of blood. Fig.: A field of bloodshed.

  • Rosin
  • n.

    The hard, amber-colored resin left after distilling off the volatile oil of turpentine; colophony.

  • Hospitaler
  • n.

    One of an order of knights who built a hospital at Jerusalem for pilgrims, A. D. 1042. They were called Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, and after the removal of the order to Malta, Knights of Malta.

  • Gehenna
  • n.

    The valley of Hinnom, near Jerusalem, where some of the Israelites sacrificed their children to Moloch, which, on this account, was afterward regarded as a place of abomination, and made a receptacle for all the refuse of the city, perpetual fires being kept up in order to prevent pestilential effluvia. In the New Testament the name is transferred, by an easy metaphor, to Hell.

  • Judaizer
  • n.

    One who conforms to or inculcates Judaism; specifically, pl. (Ch. Hist.), those Jews who accepted Christianity but still adhered to the law of Moses and worshiped in the temple at Jerusalem.

  • Synanthrose
  • n.

    A variety of sugar, isomeric with sucrose, found in the tubers of the Jerusalem artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus), in the dahlia, and other Compositae.