Showing posts with label prophet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prophet. Show all posts

Cyrus ;prophet or king- first to implement human rights?




  Everybody knows where Cyrus the Great’s tomb is. It attracts hundreds of tourists every year. What’s all the fuss about? He was a great king. OK. But there were other great kings, too. Did he do something hugely different? Yes. He established the first Human Rights Declaration. Something that was unprecedented and remained unique for tens of centuries later. In this article, we’re going to read about the first Human Rights Declaration. It is also known as the Cyrus Cylinder.From Babylon, the idea of human rights spread quickly to India, Greece and eventually Rome. There the concept of “natural law” arose, in observation of the fact that people tended to follow certain unwritten laws in the course of life, and Roman law was based on rational ideas derived from the nature of things.


Documents asserting individual rights, such as the Magna Carta (1215), the Petition of Right (1628), the US Constitution (1787), the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789), and the US Bill of Rights (1791) are the written precursors to many of today’s human rights documents.


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The Magna Carta


Around the year 1285 (1879-1882), while excavating in Babylon (Mesopotamia), the Iranian archaeologist Hormuzd Rassam found a small cylinder made of baked clay (23 cm). It contained an inscription from Cyrus the Great. It was what we today know as the Cyrus Cylinder, or the first Human Rights Declaration.Cyrus was born between 590 and 580 BCE, either in Media or, more probably, in Persis, the modern Fārs province of Iran. The meaning of his name is in dispute, for it is not known whether it was a personal name or a throne name given to him when he became a ruler. It is noteworthy that after the Achaemenian empire the name does not appear again in sources relating to Iran, which may indicate some special sense of the name.


Most scholars agree, however, that Cyrus the Great was at least the second of the name to rule in Persia. One cuneiform text in Akkadian—the language of Mesopotamia (present-day Iraq) in the pre-Christian era—asserts he was the The most important source for his life is the Greek historian Herodotus. The idealized biography by Xenophon is a work for the edification of the Greeks concerning the ideal ruler, rather than a historical treatise. It does, however, indicate the high esteem in which Cyrus was held, not only by his own people, the Persians, but by the Greeks and others. Herodotus says that the Persians called Cyrus their father, while later Achaemenian rulers were not so well regarded. The story of the childhood of Cyrus, as told by Herodotus with echoes in Xenophon, may be called a Cyrus legend since it obviously follows a pattern of folk beliefs about the almost superhuman qualities of the founder of a dynasty. Similar beliefs also exist about the founders of later dynasties throughout the history of Iran. According to the legend, Astyages, the king of the Medes and overlord of the Persians, gave his daughter in marriage to his vassal in Persis, a prince called Cambyses. From this marriage Cyrus was born. Astyages, having had a dream that the baby would grow up to overthrow him, ordered Cyrus slain. His chief adviser, however, instead gave the baby to a shepherd to raise. When he was 10 years old, Cyrus, because of his outstanding qualities, was discovered by Astyages, who, in spite of the dream, was persuaded to allow the boy to live. Cyrus, when he reached manhood in Persis, revolted against his maternal grandfather and overlord. Astyages marched against the rebel, but his army deserted him and surrendered to Cyrus in 550 BCE.


After inheriting the empire of the Medes, Cyrus first had to consolidate his power over Iranian tribes on the Iranian plateau before expanding to the west. Croesus, king of Lydia in Asia Minor (Anatolia), had enlarged his domains at the expense of the Medes when he heard of the fall of Astyages, and Cyrus, as successor of the Median king, marched against Lydia. Sardis, the Lydian capital, was captured in 547 or 546, and Croesus was either killed or burned himself to death, though according to other sources he was taken prisoner by Cyrus and well treated. The Ionian Greek cities on the Aegean Sea coast, as vassals of the Lydian king, now became subject to Cyrus, and most of them submitted after short sieges. Several revolts of the Greek cities were later suppressed with severity. Next Cyrus turned to Babylonia, where the dissatisfaction of the people with the ruler Nabonidus gave him a pretext for invading the lowlands. The conquest was quick, for even the priests of Marduk, the national deity of the great metropolis of Babylon, had become estranged from Nabonidus. In October 539 BCE, the greatest city of the ancient world fell to the Persians.


In the Bible (e.g., Ezra 1:1–4), Cyrus is famous for freeing the Jewish captives in Babylonia and allowing them to return to their homeland. Cyrus was also tolerant toward the Babylonians and others. He conciliated local populations by supporting local customs and even sacrificing to local deities. The capture of Babylon delivered not only Mesopotamia into the hands of Cyrus but also Syria and Palestine, which had been conquered previously by the Babylonians. The ruler of Cilicia in Asia Minor had become an ally of Cyrus when the latter marched against Croesus, and Cilicia retained a special status in Cyrus’s empire. Thus it was by diplomacy as well as force of arms that he established the largest empire known until his time.


Cyrus seems to have had several capitals. One was the city of Ecbatana, modern Hamadan, former capital of the Medes, and another was a new capital of the empire, Pasargadae, in Persis, said to be on the site where Cyrus had won the battle against Astyages. The ruins today, though few, arouse admiration in the visitor. Cyrus also kept Babylon as a winter capital.


No Persian chauvinist, Cyrus was quick to learn from the conquered peoples. He not only conciliated the Medes but united them with the Persians in a kind of dual monarchy of the Medes and Persians. Cyrus had to borrow the traditions of kingship from the Medes, who had ruled an empire when the Persians were merely their vassals. A Mede was probably made an adviser to the Achaemenian king, as a sort of chief minister; on later reliefs at Persepolis, a capital of the Achaemenian kings from the time of Darius, a Mede is frequently depicted together with the great king. The Elamites, indigenous inhabitants of Persis, were also the teachers of the Persians in many ways, as can be seen, for example, in the Elamite dress worn by Persians and by Elamite objects carried by them on the stone reliefs at Persepolis. There also seems to have been little innovation in government and rule, but rather a willingness to borrow, combined with an ability to adapt what was borrowed to the new empire. Cyrus was undoubtedly the guiding genius in the creation not only of a great empire but in the formation of Achaemenian culture and civilization.


Little is known of the family life of Cyrus. He had two sons, one of whom, Cambyses, succeeded him; the other, Bardiya (Smerdis of the Greeks), was probably secretly put to death by Cambyses after he became ruler. Cyrus had at least one daughter, Atossa (who married her brother Cambyses), and possibly two others, but they played no role in history.


When Cyrus defeated Astyages he also inherited Median possessions in eastern Iran, but he had to engage in much warfare to consolidate his rule in this region. After his conquest of Babylonia, he again turned to the east, and Herodotus tells of his campaign against nomads living east of the Caspian Sea. According to the Greek historian, Cyrus was at first successful in defeating the ruler of the nomads—called the Massagetai—who was a woman, and captured her son. On the son’s committing suicide in captivity, his mother swore revenge and defeated and killed Cyrus. Herodotus’s story may be apocryphal, but Cyrus’s conquests in Central Asia were probably genuine, since a city in farthest Sogdiana was called Cyreschata, or Cyropolis, by the Greeks, which seems to prove the extent of his Eastern conquests.It is a testimony to the capability of the founder of the Achaemenian empire that it continued to expand after his death and lasted for more than two centuries. But Cyrus was not only a great conqueror and administrator; he held a place in the minds of the Persian people similar to that of Romulus and Remus in Rome or Moses for the Israelites. His saga follows in many details the stories of hero and conquerors from elsewhere in the ancient world. The manner in which the baby Cyrus was given to a shepherd to raise is reminiscent of Moses in the bulrushes in Egypt, and the overthrow of his tyrannical grandfather has echoes in other myths and legends. There is no doubt that the Cyrus saga arose early among the Persians and was known to the Greeks. The sentiments of esteem or even awe in which Persians held him were transmitted to the Greeks, and it was no accident that Xenophon chose Cyrus to be the model of a ruler for the lessons he wished to impart to his fellow Greeks.


In short, the figure of Cyrus has survived throughout history as more than a great man who founded an empire. He became the epitome of the great qualities expected of a ruler in antiquity, and he assumed heroic features as a conqueror who was tolerant and magnanimous as well as brave and daring. His personality as seen by the Greeks influenced them and Alexander the Great, and, as the tradition was transmitted by the Romans, may be considered to influence our thinking even now. In the year 1971, Iran celebrated the 2,500th anniversary of the founding of the monarchy by Cyrus.A brilliant military strategist, Cyrus vanquished the king of the Medes, then integrated all the Iranian tribes, whose skill at fighting on horseback gave his army great mobility. His triumph over Lydia, in Asia Minor near the Aegean Sea, filled his treasury with that country’s tremendous wealth.The benevolent nature of Cyrus’s reign took many forms. He placated the formerly powerful Medes by involving them in government. He adopted habits of dress and ornamentation from the Elamites. Across his conquered lands, he returned images of gods that had been seized in battle and hoarded in Babylon. And in Babylon itself, he publicly worshipped the city’s revered Marduk.


Cyrus’s most renowned act of mercy was to free the captive Jews, whom Nebuchadrezzar II had forced into exile in Babylon. Cyrus allowed them to return to their promised land. The Jews praised the Persian emperor in scripture as a savior to whom God gave power over other kingdoms so that he would restore them to Jerusalem and allow them to rebuild their Temple.

Abraham the prophet of god; true monothist


 The account of Abraham and his descendents is found in the book of Genesis. We initially meet him in Genesis part 11, in spite of the fact that at this stage his name is Abram. There is next to no true to life insight regarding him separated from the way that he was a shepherd and came from Ur in Mesopotamia - current Iraq - after which he and his family moved, with his dad Terah, to Haran. 


This is a polytheistic age, an age when individuals had confidence in and loved numerous divine beings. However inside this air, Abram answers the call of God and it is a result of this that he acknowledges and understands the situation of there being just a single genuine God. 


In the Jewish custom called Midrash (a Hebrew word which signifies 'understanding' and identifies with the manner in which readings or scriptural stanzas are perceived), there are various anecdotes about Abraham crushing his dad's objects of worship when he understands that there can be just a single God of paradise and earth. It doesn't make any difference if the narratives are valid. They recognize that Abraham was the primary individual to perceive and adore the one God. Thus, monotheism was conceived. 




Toward the start of Genesis section 12, God requested that Abram leave his home and nation and he makes Abram three guarantees: the guarantee of a relationship with God, various descendents and land. 


I will make you an extraordinary country 


Also, I will favor you; 


I will make your name extraordinary, 


Furthermore, you will be a gift 


I will favor the individuals who favor you, 


Also, whoever curses you I will revile; 


And every one of the people groups of the earth 


Will be honored through you 


Beginning 12:1-3 


The solitary issue is that both Abram and his better half, Sarai (later called Sarah) are elderly individuals and childless. They should leave their country and they don't have the foggiest idea who this God is! They appear to be a practically inconceivable arrangement of guarantees for God to keep. Yet, the stunning reality about Abram is that he does what he is inquired. There are no signs or marvels; he has no sacred writings or customs on which to draw, so Abram needs to put his confidence in this anonymous God. Subsequently, Abram has stood out forever as a man of colossal confidence. Because of his dutifulness, God changes his name to Abraham, signifying 'father of individuals'. 


A definitive trial of Abraham's dutifulness, nonetheless, comes in Genesis 22 when he is approached to forfeit his child by Sarah - Isaac. God had guaranteed that Abraham's descendents would come through Isaac, so the degree of confidence he shows is very shocking. Abraham confides in God and takes his child, as coordinated, up a mountain. At the last possible moment, God mediates and saves Isaac's life by giving another creature (a slam) for penance. The test is finished and God again repeats his vows to Abraham of land, descendents and an individual relationship. 


As per the Bible, Abraham is humankind's last opportunity to build up a relationship with God. Toward the start of the Bible in the creation stories, Adam and Eve set in train an example of defiance to God's orders which flourishes. Even after the Great Flood, where just Noah was saved, humankind by and by verges on estranging themselves from their maker God. They construct the pinnacle of Babel (Genesis 11), a pinnacle that seems like it will nearly get through to the sky and God again intercedes and disperses individuals across the earth. 


Numerous researchers accept these accounts were composed to disclose to individuals why the world resembles it is and why people are as are they. What is our spot on the planet? For what reason do we kick the bucket? They address inquiries of life and passing, instead of being just clarifications about how the world was made. 


Toward the finish of Genesis 11, we are furnished with a parentage and Abraham turns into the new expectation through which God will attempt to make a group to live by a specific arrangement of qualities. The significant thing to learn here is the uniqueness of the Covenant connection among God and Abraham. Interestingly, we see the start of a two-way relationship: God working on something for Abraham, and Abraham working on something for God. The endowments of God are given starting with one age then onto the next. 


The narrative of Abraham is about compliance to the desire of God - not visually impaired acquiescence, on the grounds that the Bible stories reveal to us that Abraham habitually tested God and posed inquiries. Yet, eventually, he confided in this God who had made such phenomenal guarantees and in this manner framed an exceptionally unique and individual relationship with God which, devotees will contend, has proceeded through to the current day. 


The Bible notes that at age 75, Abraham got a heavenly greeting or calling from God (Yahweh) to make a trip to a far off land where God would compensate him incalculable. Beginning 12:1–3 states: 


I will make you into an incredible country, and I will favor you; I will make your name extraordinary, and you will be a gift. I will favor the individuals who favor you, and whoever curses you I will revile; and all people groups on earth will be honored through you. (12:2-3) 


ABRAHAM TRUSTED GOD and TOOK HIS ENTIRE FAMILY (INCLUDING HIS FATHER and NEPHEW LOT) and PERSONAL POSSESSIONS ON HIS TREK TO THIS PROMISED LAND. 


Notwithstanding the intrinsic risks of going at a particularly advanced age and through obscure and unpleasant domain, Abraham confided in God and took his whole family (counting his dad and nephew Lot) and individual belongings on his journey to this guaranteed land. 


The initial segment of the excursion purportedly took them to Haran, in northern Mesopotamia, where his dad, Terah, kicked the bucket at age 205. In the second piece of the outing, Abraham's band entered and visited through Canaan, where God appeared to Abraham, saying, "To your posterity I will give this land" (12:7). In festival and love, Abraham assembled a special stepped area to God and afterward "went on toward the slopes east of Bethel and set up his shelter, with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east" (12:8). As prior, Genesis takes note of that Abraham assembled another raised area to God prior to moving again to the Negev, southwest of the Dead Sea. 


Disguise in Egypt 


A dismal yet ordinary piece of old Middle Eastern presence, a horrible starvation moved through Canaan, and Abraham and his family ran away to Egypt for salvage and alleviation. The move was a long way from consoling as Abraham dreaded for his life as a result of the excellence of his 65-year-old spouse. Abraham stated, "When the Egyptians see you, they will say, 'This is his better half.' Then they will kill me yet will allow you to live" (12:12). 


In smarts or out of weakness, Abraham trained his significant other to "imagine" to be his sister, which was at that point verifiably evident, Sarah being his stepsister. Abraham's interests were supported, evidently, on the grounds that after they entered Egypt, "the Egyptians saw that Sarai was an extremely excellent lady. What's more, when the Pharaoh's authorities saw her, they applauded her to Pharaoh [possibly Senusret II, who administered Egypt from 1897-1878 BCE], and she was taken into his castle" (12:14–15). For Abraham, this was not the most noticeably awful of circumstances for he got numerous blessings from Pharaoh, including cows and workers. 


Sarai Is Taken to Pharaoh's Palace 


Sarai Is Taken to Pharaoh's Palace 


James Jacques Joseph Tissot (Public Domain) 


All things considered, the Bible describes that God was not satisfied with the situation encompassing Abraham and Sarah. The Pharaoh and his family before long experienced unpleasant sicknesses, which made him aware of Abraham's ploy. Pharaoh shouted, "How have you dealt with me?" (12:18), disgraces Abraham for his trickiness, and requests that the two of them leave (despite the fact that he permits Abraham to keep his endowments, strangely). From that point, Genesis records that "Abraham went up from Egypt to the Negev, with his significant other and all that he had, and Lot went with him. Abram had gotten exceptionally affluent in animals and in silver and gold" (13:1-2). 


Getting back to Canaan, Abraham and his clan flourish and grow much more than previously, which prompts intertribal quarreling and contest among Abraham and Lot's shepherds over touching grounds for their always expanding groups. Beginning states: 


Yet, the land couldn't uphold them while they remained together, for their assets were extraordinary to the point that they couldn't remain together. Also, quarreling emerged between Abram's herders and Lot's. (13:5–7) 


In this way, the two split up and Abraham picked the Plain of Hebron to call "home," and Lot picked the Plain of Sodom, which would wind up a sad decision for Lot and his family. 


Barrenness 


One of the focal pieces of the account of Abraham and Sarah concerns their failure to imagine a youngster, which was vital in ancient times—both socially and for endurance. Childlessness and infertility in the Patriarchal Age was viewed as an indication of disgrace upon the lady, ordinarily the aftereffect of undisclosed sin in her life. Also, youngsters were viewed as a gift and a type of government managed retirement, safeguarding assurance and care in individuals' advanced age. Naturally, in Genesis 15:1, Abraham regrets: 


Sovereign Lord, what would you be able to give me since I stay childless and the person who will acquire my domain is Eliezer of Damascus? ... You have given me no kids; along these lines, a worker in my family will be my beneficiary. (2–3) 


The Bible by and by gives a brief look into the close connection among Abraham and his divinity with God broadcasting, "Don't be apprehensive, Abram. I'm your safeguard, your incredible prize" (1), and Abraham trusting God, which "[God] acknowledged it to him as nobility" (15:6). Abraham's better half, Sarah, nonetheless, was not so much quiet but rather more urgent to have a kid. Herself clearly fruitless and of cutting edge years, Sarah orders Abraham to have sexual relations with their Egyptian slave, Hagar, whose youngster Sarah would take to raise as her own. 


Sarah Presenting Hagar to Abraham 


Sarah Presenting Hagar to Abraham 


Thomas Hawk (CC BY-NC) 


Albeit this annoys present day sensibilities for its mercilessness and misuse, sexual experiences among slaves and proprietors were not an uncommon occasion; as slave, Hagar had hardly any privileges of possession. Also, such a contact.

Abraham verily indentifies himself as a true monothist in history,and its great to discuss about him and its mercy of god upon himthat he multiplied his descendents,who still exists?

Jonah the prophet of god;


 One of the greatest prophets during the time of Jeroboam II was Jonah the son of Amitai, who, as a prophet disciple, had anointed Jehu and who, therefore, enjoyed the king's benevolence. Once G‑d commanded Jonah to go to Nineveh, one of the largest cities of that time and foretell its destruction, because the evil of its inhabitants had reached the limit. The mission, however, was not to Jonah's liking. Nineveh was a bitter enemy of Israel, and Jonah would have liked to see its destruction. If he should succeed in his mission and Nineveh would be spared, it would remain a constant threat to Israel. Jonah therefore decided to seek escape. He boarded a ship that sailed for Tarshish, hoping to forget about his mission. Once the prophet was on the high seas, G‑d caused a storm to break that threatened to tear the ship asunder. The sailors were frightened and each one prayed to his god. Jonah, however, lay down to sleep. The captain of the ship, seeing the sleeping man, went over to him and reprimanded him for sleeping in that fateful hour, instead of praying to G‑d. Meanwhile the sailors drew lots to find out whose fault it was that this misfortune had been brought upon them. The lot fell upon Jonah. When the sailors questioned him as to who he was, whence he had come, and what his business was, he told them that he was a Jew and a servant of G‑d, the Creator of heaven and earth. Then the sailors asked what they should do in order to quiet the raging sea and save their ship with all aboard. Jonah replied that all they had to do was to throw him overboard, and the storm would immediately die down, since it had been caused by his refusal to obey G‑d's command. At first the sailors did not want to do as Jonah asked. But the storm grew fiercer and the end was seemingly unavoidable. Very reluctantly, the sailors threw Jonah into the water and the storm ceased at once.


As soon as Jonah was in the water, G‑d sent a large fish to swallow Jonah alive. Three days and three nights Jonah stayed within the fish. In distress, he prayed to G‑d to save him, and G‑d ordered the fish to eject Jonah and set him on dry land.

Again G‑d ordered Jonah to go to Nineveh to convey the Divine message. This time the prophet traveled to Nineveh to carry out his mission. Upon his arrival in the city, Jonah stepped right into the middle of the busy thoroughfare and announced that the city would perish in forty days. The prophet's solemn warning electrified the city. The residents believed the prophecy and repented. They fasted and wore sackcloth; even the king himself took off his royal robes and put on the garbs of mourning. Everyone in the city honestly and sincerely decided to abandon his evil past. All the people truly tried to mend their ways. Possessions unjustly acquired were returned to their rightful owners, and false judgments were revised. G‑d saw that they were sincere in their repentance and accepted it. Nineveh was saved.


Jonah was displeased at this change of events. He had hoped that the doom of Nineveh, had the inhabitants of that city not repented, would forever rid his people Israel of one of its bitter enemies. He built himself a hut outside the city in which to live the life of a recluse. Jonah was anxious to know what the fate of the city would be. It was a very hot day, and G‑d made a plant grow to give Jonah shade and protect him from the sting of the hot sun. Jonah was overjoyed with the plant. Then G‑d sent a worm that stung the plant and made it wither. When the protection of the plant had been withdrawn, the sun beat mercilessly upon Jonah's head until he became faint, and wished to die. Then the weary prophet heard G‑d's words: "You are sorry for the plant for which you have neither labored, nor made it grow; which came up in one night and perished in the next; shall I not then, spare Nineveh, the great city, wherein more than twelve times ten thousand people live who do not know how to discern between their right and their left hand (i.e. children), and many animals in addition.Book of Jonah, also spelled Jonas, the fifth of 12 Old Testament books that bear the names of the Minor Prophets, embraced in a single book, The Twelve, in the Jewish canon. Unlike other Old Testament prophetic books, Jonah is not a collection of the prophet’s oracles but primarily a narrative about the man.Jonah is portrayed as a recalcitrant prophet who flees from God’s summons to prophesy against the wickedness of the city of Nineveh. According to the opening verse, Jonah is the son of Amittai. This lineage identifies him with the Jonah mentioned in II Kings 14:25 who prophesied during the reign of Jeroboam II, about 785 BC. It is possible that some of the traditional materials taken over by the book were associated with Jonah at an early date, but the book in its present form reflects a much later composition. It was written after the Babylonian Exile (6th century BC), probably in the 5th or 4th century and certainly no later than the 3rd, since Jonah is listed among the Minor Prophets in the apocryphal book of Ecclesiasticus, composed about 190. Like the Book of Ruth, which was written at about the same period, it opposes the narrow Jewish nationalism characteristic of the period following the reforms of Ezra and Nehemiah with their emphasis on Jewish exclusivity. Thus the prophet Jonah, like the Jews of the day, abhors even the idea of salvation for the Gentiles. God chastises him for his attitude, and the book affirms that God’s mercy extends even to the inhabitants of a hated foreign city. The incident of the great fish, recalling Leviathan, the monster of the deep used elsewhere in the Old Testament as the embodiment of evil, symbolizes the nation’s exile and return.


As the story is related in the Book of Jonah, the prophet Jonah is called by God to go to Nineveh (a great Assyrian city) and prophesy disaster because of the city’s excessive wickedness. Jonah, in the story, feels about Nineveh as does the author of the Book of Nahum—that the city must inevitably fall because of God’s judgment against it. Thus Jonah does not want to prophesy, because Nineveh might repent and thereby be saved. So he rushes down to Joppa and takes passage in a ship that will carry him in the opposite direction, thinking to escape God. A storm of unprecedented severity strikes the ship, and in spite of all that the master and crew can do, it shows signs of breaking up and foundering. Lots are cast, and Jonah confesses that it is his presence on board that is causing the storm. At his request, he is thrown overboard, and the storm subsides.A “great fish,” appointed by God, swallows Jonah, and he stays within the fish’s maw for three days and nights. He prays for deliverance and is “vomited out” on dry land (ch. 2). Again the command is heard, “Arise, go to Nineveh.” Jonah goes to Nineveh and prophesies against the city, causing the King and all the inhabitants to repent.Jonah then becomes angry. Hoping for disaster, he sits outside the city to await its destruction. A plant springs up overnight, providing him welcome shelter from the heat, but it is destroyed by a great worm. Jonah is bitter at the destruction of the plant, but God speaks and thrusts home the final point of the story: “You pity the plant, for which you did not labor, nor did you make it grow, which came into being in a night, and perished in a night. And should not I pity Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand persons who do not know their right hand from their left, and also much cattle?” (ch. 4).


Jonah has been the subject of works by such artists as John Bernard Flannagan and Albert Pinkham Ryder. Chapter nine of Herman Melville’s Moby Dick is a sermon and hymn about Jonah.

Name of ALI upon the viking garment;Authenticity?

  BBC News , textile archaeologist Annika Larsson of Uppsala University found Arabic words woven into tiny geometric designs on garments mad...