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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database

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3 results for "alexandrian"
1. Septuagint, 3 Maccabees, 6.22 (2nd cent. BCE - 2nd cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •alexandrian, origin Found in books: Piotrkowski (2019) 55
6.22. Then the king's anger was turned to pity and tears because of the things that he had devised beforehand.
2. Septuagint, 2 Maccabees, 4.35-4.37 (2nd cent. BCE - 2nd cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •alexandrian, origin Found in books: Piotrkowski (2019) 55
4.35. For this reason not only Jews, but many also of other nations, were grieved and displeased at the unjust murder of the man.' 4.36. When the king returned from the region of Cilicia, the Jews in the city appealed to him with regard to the unreasonable murder of Onias, and the Greeks shared their hatred of the crime.' 4.37. Therefore Antiochus was grieved at heart and filled with pity, and wept because of the moderation and good conduct of the deceased;'
3. Josephus Flavius, Jewish Antiquities, 13.67, 13.69-13.70, 15.385 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •alexandrian, origin Found in books: Piotrkowski (2019) 55
13.67. I desire therefore that you will grant me leave to purge this holy place, which belongs to no master, and is fallen down, and to build there a temple to Almighty God, after the pattern of that in Jerusalem, and of the same dimensions, that may be for the benefit of thyself, and thy wife and children, that those Jews which dwell in Egypt may have a place whither they may come and meet together in mutual harmony one with another, and he subservient to thy advantages; 13.69. 2. And this was what Onias wrote to king Ptolemy. Now any one may observe his piety, and that of his sister and wife Cleopatra, by that epistle which they wrote in answer to it; for they laid the blame and the transgression of the law upon the head of Onias. And this was their reply: 13.70. “King Ptolemy and queen Cleopatra to Onias, send greeting. We have read thy petition, wherein thou desirest leave to be given thee to purge that temple which is fallen down at Leontopolis, in the Nomus of Heliopolis, and which is named from the country Bubastis; on which account we cannot but wonder that it should be pleasing to God to have a temple erected in a place so unclean, and so full of sacred animals. 15.385. Our fathers, indeed, when they were returned from Babylon, built this temple to God Almighty, yet does it want sixty cubits of its largeness in altitude; for so much did that first temple which Solomon built exceed this temple;