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Yirmiyahu HaNavi

Yirmiyahu HaNavi

650 BCE570 BCE · Biblical · Eretz Yisrael (travels)

Jeremiah son of Hilkiah was a major prophet of ancient Israel active during the final decades of the First Temple period. He prophesied primarily during the reigns of Josiah through Zedekiah, warning the kingdom of Judah of impending destruction by Babylon if the people did not repent and turn from idolatry. Known for his anguished, deeply personal prophecies and his message of judgment tempered with hope for restoration, Jeremiah experienced fierce opposition from false prophets, priests, and officials who rejected his warnings. He was imprisoned, beaten, and nearly executed, yet persisted in his mission. After Jerusalem's fall in 586 BCE, tradition holds he was taken to Egypt. His oracles, preserved in the biblical Book of Jeremiah, profoundly shaped Jewish theology of exile and restoration.

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Eretz Yisrael (travels)Land of Israel

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Eretz Yisrael (travels) in this era

The land that became home to the Hebrew people across more than a millennium of upheaval was ruled successively by Egyptian overlords, Canaanite city-states, the judges who defended tribal lands, then the unified monarchy of David and Solomon, before fragmenting into northern and southern kingdoms until conquest by Assyria and Babylon scattered the population into exile. The Jewish community was never one thing during this vast arc: it was nomadic settlers claiming territory, tribal confederations fighting for survival, a nation-state centered on Jerusalem's Temple with priests and prophets wielding spiritual authority, then exiles by the rivers of Babylon mourning the destroyed sanctuary, and finally returnees under Persian permission rebuilding walls and restoring Temple worship around Ezra and Nehemiah. The intellectual and spiritual life was foundational—this era birthed the Torah itself, the Psalms, prophetic vision, and the consciousness of covenant that would define Judaism forever. The Jordan River marked the threshold of entry; the Temple in Jerusalem, rebuilt after exile, became the magnetic center of identity and longing; and the scroll—whether law or prophecy—became portable home for a people learning to survive diaspora and remember return.

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Influenced byYeshayahu HaNaviYirmiyahu HaNaviShapedYechezkel HaNaviDanielEzra HaSofer