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Tammuz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tammuz may refer to: • Tammuz (deity), Babylonian and Sumerian god • Tammuz (Hebrew month), the 10th month of the Hebrew calendar • Tammuz (Babylonian calendar), a month in the Babylonian calendar תמ...
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The 17th day in the Jewish month of Tammuz, Jews the world over fast and lament to commemorate the many calamities that have befallen our people on this ominous day. ... The Mishna in Ta'anit 4:8 associates the 17th of Tammuz as the "Fast of the Fourth Month" mentioned by the prophet Zechariah. According to this Mishna,
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"Chodesh Tammuz," The Month of Tammuz; ... ; "And He brought me to the entrance at the Gate of the House of the L-rd which was at the north; and there were there women sitting, bewailing the Tammuz" (Yechezkel 8:14) ... Chodesh Tammuz In Relation to Other Months of the Year...
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Tammuz (deity) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Northwest Semitic Tammuz (Hebrew תַּמּוּז , Standard Hebrew Tammuz , Tiberian Hebrew Tammûz ), Arabic تمّوز Tammūz ; Akkadian Duʾzu , Dūzu ; Sumerian Dumuzid (DUMU.ZID "the t...
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Lamenting for Tammuz in Ezekiel ; ... In Ezekiel 8 the men were holding the first "sun rise service" and the women were in the temple lamenting or singing to Tammuz. ... The Tammuz cult in the temple was being practiced by women, and it appears that they must bear their full share of responsibility for introducing...
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Was the story of Jesus stolen from that of the Sumerian deity Tammuz? ... The ancient Sumerian deity Tammuz, or Dumuzi, has been thrown around a bit as a possible source for Christian belief by copycatters, but with little in the way of specifics.
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The Three Weeks: 17 Tammuz - 9 Av Mourning the Destruction -- Judaism on the Internet -- The ultimate resource for Jews, Judaism, Jewish Education, and Torah. ... The fast days of 17 Tammuz and 9 Av, and the time between them, commemorate the tragic process of the destruction of the two Holy Temples in Jerusalem.
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Search the scriptures diligently, from Old Testament to New, and you will find no mention of Jews or Christians observing an annual period of 40 days of fasting and abstinence preceding the festival of the Passover, yet today most of ... It rained 40 days and nights: ... Forty days after sighting the tops of the mountains,
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Ishtar knew that Tammuz was in the Underworld which was ruled by her sister Erishkigal. To reach Erishkigal, Ishtar had to pass the seven gates of the Underworld and at each gate surrender some of her jewelry or a garment until finally she stood before her sister naked, unadorned and completely vulnerable.
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Tammuz also Thammuz is the tenth month of the year in the Jewish calendar [Hebrew Tammuz, from Babylonian Du’uzu, the name of a god]. In Egypt, Tammuz was a god of harvest (late summer month) of Mesopotamia, Akkad and Sumer.
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