By: Dan Bahat
The Atlas of Biblical Jerusalem, which is excerpted from the more extensive The Illustrated Atlas of Jerusalem, is a helpful and instructive tool for readers of the Scriptures and all who wish to visualize the Holy City as it was in biblical and New Testament times.
Jerusalem was at the apex of its glory and beauty during the last century before the destruction of theTemple in 70 CE. Herod had built many magnificent edifices in the city, with theTemple and its Mount as the crowning glory. These works gained fame, and the Talmud goes out of its way to describe the physical qualities of the city, which “took nine measures of beauty out of the ten with which the world was bestowed, leaving one measure to the rest of the world.”
This illustrated volume is based on the results of the latest archaeological excavations.
Language: English (Available also in: German: Der Atlas des Biblischen Jerusalems) Soft Cover, 48 pages, 8.75 x 11.5 in. (22 x 29.5 cm) Featuring: Index Maps Full Color Illustrations ISBN: 965-220-238-X Weight: 214 g (7.54 oz.)$17.95
Illustrated with over a hundred vistas, town maps and plans, and holy sites in words and pictures, this lavish guide to Jesus in the Holy Land follows the course of the life of Jesus.
By definition, a guide book must be easy to carry around, and this beautifully illustrated little guide for pilgrims to the Holy Land is just that. It is principally concerned with the Gospels and the places where the events of the Redemption took place.
Introduction by M. J. Dubois, O.P. This luxuriously illustrated volume is intended for pilgrims and visitors to Jerusalem, the Way of the Cross – the Via Dolorosa, and the 14 Stations of the Cross. It is an intelligible account of the origin, meaning and development of this pious practice.
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