Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2894911> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 58 of
58
with 100 triples per page.
- Q2894911 subject Q17424940.
- Q2894911 subject Q6394679.
- Q2894911 subject Q7061998.
- Q2894911 subject Q8305732.
- Q2894911 subject Q8459597.
- Q2894911 subject Q8507844.
- Q2894911 subject Q8508207.
- Q2894911 subject Q8792649.
- Q2894911 abstract "A lake of fire appears, in both ancient Egyptian and Christian religion, as a place of after-death destruction of the wicked. The phrase is used in four verses of the Book of Revelation. Such a lake also appears in Plato's Phaedo, explicitly identified with Tartarus, where the souls of the wicked are tormented until it is time for them to be reborn, and where some souls are left forever. The image was also used by the Early Christian Hippolytus of Rome in about the year 200 and has continued to be used by modern Christians. Related is Jewish Gehenna which, among other things, like hell, is a valley near Jerusalem where trash was burned.".
- Q2894911 wikiPageExternalLink PPA947,M1.
- Q2894911 wikiPageExternalLink PPA61,M1.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q106039.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q1191044.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q131483.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q1482030.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q154365.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q159791.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q17424940.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q174361.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q1993310.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q2018575.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q207113.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q225340.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q231103.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q2457724.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q3073326.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q3276239.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q330942.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q3360416.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q345.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q3452850.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q35269.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q42040.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q447131.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q460509.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q4958604.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q51644.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q532105.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q5402727.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q558093.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q566.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q623282.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q6394679.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q6478635.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q666.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q6674.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q7061998.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q719524.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q7228556.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q7311363.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q8305732.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q8459597.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q8507844.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q8508207.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q8792649.
- Q2894911 wikiPageWikiLink Q9592.
- Q2894911 comment "A lake of fire appears, in both ancient Egyptian and Christian religion, as a place of after-death destruction of the wicked. The phrase is used in four verses of the Book of Revelation. Such a lake also appears in Plato's Phaedo, explicitly identified with Tartarus, where the souls of the wicked are tormented until it is time for them to be reborn, and where some souls are left forever.".
- Q2894911 label "Lake of fire".