Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Magog_(Bible)> ?p ?o }
- Magog_(Bible) abstract "Magog (/ˈmeɪɡɔːɡ/; Hebrew מגוג [maˈɡoɡ], Greek Μαγωγ) is the second of the seven sons of Japheth mentioned in the Table of Nations in Genesis 10. It may represent Hebrew for "from Gog", though this is far from certain. Magog is often associated with apocalyptic traditions, mainly in connection with Ezekiel 38 and 39 which mentions "Gog of the land of Magog, the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal" (Ezek 38:2 NIV); on the basis of this mention, "Gog and Magog" over time became associated with each other as a pair. In the New Testament, this pairing is found in the Book of Revelation 20:8, in which instance they may merely be metaphors for archetypal enemies of God.Josephus identified the offspring of Magog as the Scythians, a name used in antiquity for peoples north of the Black Sea. According to him, the Greeks called Scythia Magogia (Ant., bk. I, 6). An alternate identification derived from an examination of the order in which tribal names are listed in Ezekiel 38, "would place Magog between Cappadocia and Media." According to Rabbi Shlomo Ganzfried (19th century) Magog refers to the Mongols. He cites an Arab writer who refers to the Great Wall of China with the name 'Magog'.Jordanes' Getica (551) mentions Magog as ancestor of the Goths, as does the Historia Brittonum, but Isidore of Seville (c. 635) asserts that this identification was popular "because of the similarity of the last syllable" (Etymologiae, IX, 89). Johannes Magnus (1488–1544) stated that Magog migrated to Scandinavia (via Finland) 88 years after the flood, and that his five sons were Suenno (ancestor of the Swedes), Gethar (or Gog, ancestor of the Goths), Ubbo (who later ruled the Swedes and built Old Uppsala), Thor, and German. Magnus' accounts became accepted at the Swedish court for a long time, and even caused the dynastic numerals of the Swedish monarchs to be renumbered accordingly. Queen Christina of Sweden reckoned herself as number 249 in a list of kings going back to Magog. Magnus also influenced several later historians such as Daniel Juslenius (1676–1752), who derived the roots of the Finns from Magog. According to several medieval Irish chronicles, most notably the Auraicept na n-Éces and Lebor Gabála Érenn, the Irish race are a composite including descendants of Japheth's son Magog from "Scythia". Baath mac Magog (Boath), Jobhath, and Fathochta are the three sons of Magog. Fenius Farsaid, Partholón, Nemed, the Fir Bolg, the Tuatha de Danann, and the Milesians are among Magog's descendants. Magog was also supposed to have had a grandson called Heber, whose offspring spread throughout the Mediterranean.There is also a medieval Hungarian legend that says the Huns, as well as the Magyars, are descended from twin brothers named Hunor and Magor respectively, who lived by the sea of Azov in the years after the flood, and took wives from the Alans. The version of this legend in the 14th century Chronicon Pictum equates this Magor with Magog, son of Japheth.".
- Magog_(Bible) thumbnail Magogus-J.Magnus.gif?width=300.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageExternalLink george-bush-et-le-code-ezechiel.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageID "925370".
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageLength "6471".
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageOutDegree "72".
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageRevisionID "667913255".
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Al-Anbiya.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Al-Anbiyā.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Al-Kahf.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Alans.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Allez_savoir_!.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Apocalyptic.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Apocalypticism.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Arabic.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Arabic_language.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Auraicept_na_n-Éces.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Azov.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Baath_mac_Magog.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Black_Sea.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Book_of_Genesis.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Book_of_Revelation.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Cappadocia.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Apocalypticism.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hebrew_Bible_nations.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japhetic_people.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Noach_(parsha).
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Torah_people.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Christina,_Queen_of_Sweden.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Christina_of_Sweden.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Chronicon_Pictum.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Daniel_Juslenius.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Dhul-Qarnayn.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Etymologiae.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Fathochta.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Fenius_Farsaid.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Finland.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Finnish_people.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Finns.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Fir_Bolg.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Fénius_Farsaid.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Gamla_Uppsala.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Generations_of_Noah.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Getica.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink God_in_Islam.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Gog_and_Magog.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Goth.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Goths.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Greek_language.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Heber.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew_language.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Historia_Brittonum.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Hungarian_people.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Hungarians.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Hunor_and_Magor.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Huns.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Ireland.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Irish_people.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Isidore_of_Seville.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Japheth.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Jobhath.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Johannes_Magnus.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Jordanes.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Josephus.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Lebor_Gabála_Érenn.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Magyars.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Mediterranean_Sea.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Meshech.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Milesians_(Irish).
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Muhammad_in_Islam.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Nemed.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink New_Testament.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Partholón.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Quran.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Sahih_al-Bukhari.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Saḥīḥ_al-Bukhāri.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Scythian.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Scythians.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Sura.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Surah.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Table_of_Nations.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Thor.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Tuatha_Dé_Danann.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Tuatha_de_Danann.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink Tubal.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Lausanne.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink War_of_Ezekiel_38-39.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink File:Magogus-J.Magnus.gif.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLink File:Muhammad_ibn_Muhammad_Shakir_Ruzmah-i_Nathani_-_The_Monster_of_Gog_and_Magog_-_Walters_W659190B_-_Full_Page.jpg.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Heber".
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Magog (Bible)".
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Magog".
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Magoich".
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageWikiLinkText "biblical character".
- Magog_(Bible) hasPhotoCollection Magog_(Bible).
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Fr.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPA-he.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPAc-en.
- Magog_(Bible) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.