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  2. Genealogy of Jesus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genealogy_of_Jesus

    Yet evidently Matthew didn't find his respective genealogy incompatible with these prophecies. Matthew also presents the virgin birth of Jesus as fulfillment of Isaiah 7:14, which he quotes. [103] Matthew apparently quotes the ancient Septuagint translation of the verse, which renders the Hebrew word "almah" as "virgin" in Greek.

  3. Matthew 1:17 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_1:17

    The family tree of Christ, Hortus Deliciarum (1180) ... Matthew 1:17 is the seventeenth verse of the first chapter in the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament.

  4. Matthew 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_1

    Matthew 1 is the first chapter of the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament. It contains two distinct sections. The first lists the genealogy of Jesus from Abraham to his legal father Joseph, husband of Mary, his mother. The second part, beginning at verse 18, provides an account of the virgin birth of Jesus Christ.

  5. Genealogies in the Bible - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genealogies_in_the_Bible

    1.1 Family tree of Adam. 1.2 Table of Nations. 1.3 Family tree of Abraham. 2 Genealogy of Jesus in the New Testament. ... Matthew 1 and Luke 3. Comparison of genealogies

  6. Tree of Jesse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_of_Jesse

    Pictorial representations of the Jesse Tree show a symbolic tree or vine with spreading branches to represent the genealogy in accordance with Isaiah's prophecy. The 12th-century monk Hervaeus expressed the medieval understanding of the image, based on the Vulgate text: "The patriarch Jesse belonged to the royal family, that is why the root of Jesse signifies the lineage of kings.

  7. Genealogical numbering systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genealogical_numbering_systems

    The first Ahnentafel, published by Michaël Eytzinger in Thesaurus principum hac aetate in Europa viventium Cologne: 1590, pp. 146-147, in which Eytzinger first illustrates his new functional theory of numeration of ancestors; this schema showing Henry III of France as n° 1, de cujus, with his ancestors in five generations.

  8. Family 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_1

    Biblical scholar Amy Anderson made a new reconstruction of the family tree in 2004, demonstrating minuscule 1582 was a more exact representation of the text of the archetype than minuscule 1. [5]: 119 She identified the Family 1 manuscripts in Matthew as the minuscules 1, 22, 118, 131, 205, 209, 872, 1192, 1210, 1278, 1582, and 2193.

  9. Matthew 1:9 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_1:9

    Matthew 1:9 is the ninth verse of the first chapter of the Gospel of Matthew in the Bible. The verse is part of the non-synoptic section where the genealogy of Joseph , the legal father of Jesus , is listed, or on non- Pauline interpretations the genealogy of Jesus .