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  2. List of women in the Bible - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_women_in_the_Bible

    Tamar #1 – daughter-in-law of Judah, as well as the mother of two of his children, the twins Zerah and Perez. Genesis[190] Tamar #2 – daughter of King David, and sister of Absalom. Her mother was Maacah, daughter of Talmai, king of Geshur. II Samuel[191] Tamar #3 – daughter of David's son Absalom.

  3. Women in the Bible - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_Bible

    Women in the Bible are wives, mothers and daughters, servants, slaves and prostitutes. As both victors and victims, some women in the Bible change the course of important events while others are powerless to affect even their destinies. The majority of women in the Bible are anonymous and unnamed. Individual portraits of various women in the ...

  4. Dorcas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorcas

    Dorcas (Greek: Δορκάς, romanized: Dorkás), or Tabitha (Imperial Aramaic: טביתא/ܛܒܝܬܐ, romanized: Ṭaḇīṯā, lit. ' (female) gazelle'), was an early disciple of Jesus mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles [1][2] (Acts 9:36–43, see discussion here). She lived in the port city of Joppa, today absorbed by Tel Aviv.

  5. Jesus's interactions with women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus's_interactions_with...

    Jesus honors a poor widow who cast "two copper coins" into the Temple treasury. What the widow gave to God was the totality of her belongings. Women had only limited access to the Temple in Jerusalem. There Jesus found the most praiseworthy piety and sacrificial giving, not in the rich contributors, but in a poor woman. [1]

  6. Ruth (biblical figure) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_(biblical_figure)

    Ruth (biblical figure) Portrait of a woman as Ruth (c. 1853) by Francesco Hayez. Ruth (/ ruːθ /; Hebrew: רוּת, Modern: Rūt, Tiberian: Rūṯ) is the person after whom the Book of Ruth is named. She was a Moabite woman who married an Israelite, Mahlon. After the death of all the male members of her family (her husband, her father-in-law ...

  7. Jezebel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jezebel

    Women's Bible Commentary: Twentieth–Anniversary Edition. Louisville, KY. pp. 180–183. Wyatt, Stephanie (2012). "Jezebel, Elijah, and the widow of Zarephath: A ménage à trois that estranges the holy and makes the holy the strange". Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 36, no. 4: 435-458.

  8. Book of Judith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Judith

    The Book of Judith is a deuterocanonical book included in the Septuagint and the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Christian Old Testament of the Bible but excluded from the Hebrew canon and assigned by Protestants to the apocrypha. It tells of a Jewish widow, Judith, who uses her beauty and charm to kill an Assyrian general who has besieged her ...

  9. Mary of Bethany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_of_Bethany

    Mary of Bethany. Mary of Bethany[a] is a biblical figure mentioned by name in the Gospel of John and probably the Gospel of Luke in the Christian New Testament. Together with her siblings Lazarus and Martha, she is described as living in the village of Bethany, a small village in Judaea to the south of the Mount of Olives near Jerusalem.