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  1. Map of the Herodian Kingdom of Judea at its greatest extent. 31–30 BCE. Battle of Actium: Octavian defeats the alliance of Mark Antony and Queen Cleopatra's Ptolemaic Egypt in the Roman Civil War. Ptolemaic Egypt is absorbed into Octavian's victorious side to become Roman Egypt.

  2. Judea or Judæa is the ancient biblical, Roman, and modern name of the mountainous southern part of Palestine. The name of the region continued to be incorporated through the Babylonian conquest, Persian, Hellenistic, and Roman periods as Babylonian and Persian Yehud, Hasmonean Judea, and consequently Herodian and Roman Judea, respectively. [1 ...

  3. In 57–55 BCE, Aulus Gabinius, proconsul of Syria, split the former Hasmonean Kingdom into Galilee, Samaria, and Judea, with five districts of legal and religious councils known as sanhedrin (Greek: συνέδριον, "synedrion"): "And when he had ordained five councils (συνέδρια), he distributed the nation into the same number of parts.

  4. The Herodian kingdom was a 1st-century BCE vassal kingdom of the Roman Republic, ruled by Herod the Great. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.

  5. J. List of Jewish states and dynasties. Julia (daughter of Tigranes VI of Armenia) Julia Iotapa (daughter of Antiochus III) Julia of Cilicia. Gaius Julius Agrippa. Lucius Julius Gainius Fabius Agrippa. Gaius Julius Alexander Berenicianus. Gaius Julius Alexander.

  6. Geography. The Kingdom of Judah was located in the Judean Mountains, stretching from Jerusalem to Hebron and into the Negev Desert.The central ridge, ranging from forested and shrubland-covered mountains gently sloping towards the hills of the Shephelah in the west, to the dry and arid landscapes of the Judaean Desert descending into the Jordan Valley to the east, formed the kingdom's core.