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  1. Judaea, the southernmost of the three traditional divisions of ancient Palestine; the other two were Galilee in the north and Samaria in the centre. No clearly marked boundary divided Judaea from Samaria, but the town of Beersheba was traditionally the southernmost limit. The region presents a variety of geographic features, but the real core ...

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  3. The map "Judaea Province in the First Century" is part of the fabrication, with a large, borderless "Judaea" label floating in the middle of Roman Palestine. This is why we have the word "Palestine". This is why it was the British Mandate in Palestine . It is shocking that this is up on Wikipedia.

  4. Roman roads in Judaea. Roman roads in Judaea refers to an extensive network of roads built in the Roman period in what was then Judaea (later Syria Palaestina ). Remains of some still exist to this day. Many of these roads, including the graded paths, were built by the Jewish population of Judaea, used for pilgrimage to Jerusalem. [1]

  5. Media in category "Judea (Roman province)" This category contains only the following file. Herode agrippa prutah.jpg 2,600 × 1,300; 996 KB. ... In Wikipedia. Afrikaans;

  6. By the time Judea became a Roman province in AD 6, taxes were collected by Roman officials while customs continued to be collected by publicans (see Schürer, History of the Jewish People, 1:375). Although many Jews despised paying customs because of the corrupt tactics associated with publicans, the payment of customs did not seem to inspire ...

  7. Volume 36. Issue 3. Article 23. 7-1-1996. The Roman Province of Judea: A Historical Overview. John F. Hall. Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/byusq. Part of the Mormon Studies Commons, and the Religious Education Commons.

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