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Encyclopedia > Birkat Ram

Birkat Ram is a To see the geological feature that goes by the same name, see crater lake. ...crater lake in The Northeastern The Golan Heights, previously known as the Syrian Heights, is a plateau on the border of Israel, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria. ...Golan Heights. The only sources of the lake are rain water and an underground spring. The water does not leave the lake to any other body of water. According to The The first page of the Talmud, in the standard Vilna edition. ...Talmud, Birkat Ram is one of 3 underground springs, along with Hamat Gader in The Southeastern Golan Heights and Hamat in Tiberias (Hebrew טבריה, Teverya; Arabic طبرية, Ṭabariyyah) is a town on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee, Lower Galilee, Israel. ...Tiberias, that opened up in The Flood of Noah or Nóach (Rest, Standard Hebrew נוֹחַ Nóaḥ, Tiberian Hebrew נֹחַ Nōªḥ; Arabic نوح Nūḥ) is a character from the Book of Genesis who builds an ark to save his family and the worlds animals from the Deluge, the universal flood. ...Noah and didn't close up again after The Flood.


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Golan Heights - Facts, Information, and Encyclopedia Reference article (2314 words)
Mount Hermon is in the northern Golan Heights but is geologically separate from the volcanic field.
Near Hermon is a crater lake called Birkat Ram ("Ram Pool") which is fed by underground springs.
The Israeli army captured the heights and put it under military administration from 1967 until 1981, when the Knesset passed The Golan Heights Law[4], similar to its 1967 measures concerning Jerusalem.
RELS14 Glossary: M-R (5126 words)
The term was applied both to Christians, especially Christian Jews, and to people of "gnostic" tendencies, among others; see birkat.
A general term used for addressing petitions (or praise) to the deity.
The idea that one's eternal destiny is determined beforehand, from the beginning of time, by the will and plan of the deity.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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