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Löydetty 42 Tulokset: Ruled

  • So the descendants of Esau (or Edom) are named, after the chieftains who ruled them. (Genesis 36, 19)

  • his successor was Adad, son of Badad, who defeated Madian in the territory of Moab; he ruled at Avith. (Genesis 36, 35)

  • and Balanan by Adar, who ruled at Phau; his wife’s name was Meëtabel, daughter of Matred, who was daughter of Mezaab. (Genesis 36, 39)

  • ruled all over the plain that lies east of Jordan, down to the Desert Sea and the spurs of mount Phasga. (Deuteronomy 4, 49)

  • And Og, king of Basan, the last of the Raphaim, who dwelt at Astaroth and Edrai, ruled over Mount Hermon and Salecha and Basan in general, right up to the marches (Joshua 12, 4)

  • and on the low ground it contained Betharam, Bethnemra, Socoth and Saphon, all the rest of what Sehon had ruled from Hesebon; this tribe, too, had Jordan for its boundary, up to where the further, eastern shore of Lake Cenereth begins. (Joshua 13, 27)

  • the whole of Basan northwards from Manaim, all the domain over which Og, king of Basan, had ruled. This included the sixty townships in Basan which are called Jair’s villages, (Joshua 13, 30)

  • and half of Galaad, and the two cities from which Og ruled over Basan, Astaroth and Edrai. All this now belonged to the descendants of Machir, son of Manasses, Machir’s clans being thus separated from the rest. (Joshua 13, 31)

  • and the Lord put them at the mercy of Jabin, the Chanaanite king who ruled in Asor. The chieftain that commanded his army for him was called Sisara, and lived at Haroseth, in the pale of the Gentiles. (Judges 4, 2)

  • At this time Israel was ruled by a prophetess called Debbora, the wife of Lapidoth, (Judges 4, 4)

  • He was followed by Jair, a man of Galaad, who ruled Israel for twenty-two years. (Judges 10, 3)

  • He had thirty sons, each of whom rode in state on an ass’s colt of his own, and ruled a township of his own; these townships in Galaad are still called Havoth Jair, Jair’s Villages. (Judges 10, 4)


“Esforce-se, mesmo se for um pouco, mas sempre…” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina