Löydetty 559 Tulokset: First Temple
And the king bade them bring great stones, costly stones, to be the foundations of his temple, and to hew them into shape. (1 Kings 5, 17)
in front of the temple was a porch whose length, like the width of the temple itself, was twenty cubits, but it was only ten cubits wide. (1 Kings 6, 3)
Slanting windows he made to light his temple, (1 Kings 6, 4)
and about its walls he built storied galleries, that ran all round the sides of the temple and its shrine with pent-houses round about them; (1 Kings 6, 5)
the lowest of these galleries was five, the middle six, and the highest seven cubits broad; and they rested on beams close to the outside of the building all about, they were not attached to the temple walls. (1 Kings 6, 6)
All the time the temple was a-building, the stones used were ready hewn and shaped, so that there was no ringing of hammer or axe or iron tool in the house itself, while it was being built. (1 Kings 6, 7)
The furthest part of the temple was cedar-panelled to a height of twenty cubits from top to bottom; it was this inmost recess that he made into a shrine, a place all holiness, (1 Kings 6, 16)
and before the doors of this shrine the remaining forty cubits of length made up the temple proper. (1 Kings 6, 17)
Nothing in the temple but was sheathed in gold, the altar that stood before the shrine with the rest. (1 Kings 6, 22)
All the walls of the temple were adorned with bands of carved and embossed work, cherubim and palm-trees and other patterns, standing out in high relief; (1 Kings 6, 29)
At the entrance to the temple were square posts of olive-wood; (1 Kings 6, 33)
The great courtyard, which was round, had three courses of dressed stone and one of planed cedar-wood; thus the court around the palace porch was to match the inner court of the temple. (1 Kings 7, 12)
