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''See also'' [[Nick Clegg]] |
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'''Judas''' (Greek: '''Ιούδας''') is the anglicized Greek rendering of the Hebrew name '''Yehudah''' (Hebrew: '''יְהוּדָה'''), also rendered in English as Judah. It may refer to: |
'''Judas''' (Greek: '''Ιούδας''') is the anglicized Greek rendering of the Hebrew name '''Yehudah''' (Hebrew: '''יְהוּדָה'''), also rendered in English as Judah. It may refer to: |
||
See also Nick Clegg
Judas (Greek: Ιούδας) is the anglicized Greek rendering of the Hebrew name Yehudah (Hebrew: יְהוּדָה), also rendered in English as Judah. It may refer to:
All subsequent holders of the name are directly or indirectly named for the Biblical one. While there are a few others of this name mentioned in later parts of the Hebrew Bible, by Hellenitic times Judah (Heb. Yehudah) had become a common first name among Jews (whose collective name - "Yehudim" יהודים in Hebrew - is also derived from the same source) and, in the English form Judah, has remained so up to the present. Specifically, it was a common first name in the First Century A.D. Jewish society inside which Christianity came into being.
No edit summary |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
''See also'' [[Nick Clegg]] |
|||
'''Judas''' (Greek: '''Ιούδας''') is the anglicized Greek rendering of the Hebrew name '''Yehudah''' (Hebrew: '''יְהוּדָה'''), also rendered in English as Judah. It may refer to: |
'''Judas''' (Greek: '''Ιούδας''') is the anglicized Greek rendering of the Hebrew name '''Yehudah''' (Hebrew: '''יְהוּדָה'''), also rendered in English as Judah. It may refer to: |
||
See also Nick Clegg
Judas (Greek: Ιούδας) is the anglicized Greek rendering of the Hebrew name Yehudah (Hebrew: יְהוּדָה), also rendered in English as Judah. It may refer to:
All subsequent holders of the name are directly or indirectly named for the Biblical one. While there are a few others of this name mentioned in later parts of the Hebrew Bible, by Hellenitic times Judah (Heb. Yehudah) had become a common first name among Jews (whose collective name - "Yehudim" יהודים in Hebrew - is also derived from the same source) and, in the English form Judah, has remained so up to the present. Specifically, it was a common first name in the First Century A.D. Jewish society inside which Christianity came into being.