A backwards 1525 Bible map helped shape modern borders, influencing how we imagine territory, nations, and political space ...
The Museum of the Bible will soon host fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls and other ancient artifacts in Washington, D.C. In ...
Nimrod, the first biblical king after the floods, has been the object of mystery and intrigue to historians and biblical ...
Religious maps from the 1300s showing tribal Israel inadvertently became the blueprint for how later mapmakers drew political ...
In her 2024 book, God s Ghostwriters Enslaved Christians and the Making of the Bible, biblical scholar Candida Moss ...
The first Bible to feature a map of the Holy Land was published 500 years ago in 1525. The map was initially printed the ...
For the next several months, some of the oldest religious texts in history will be on display in D.C. at the Museum of the Bible.
Genesis 15 takes that promise and presses it deeper. God doesn’t bargain, negotiate, or meet Abraham halfway—He walks the covenant path alone. Abraham stands there watching the smoke and flame glide ...
The first Bible to feature a map of the Holy Land was published 500 years ago, in 1525. It still influences how we think ...
Whether or not you believe in the Bible, it’s undeniable that it affects you today. That’s true even for the most ardent ...
A new Cambridge study reveals how the first Bible ever printed with a map, released in 1525 with the Holy Land accidentally reversed, ended up transforming far more than biblical illustration. The ...
Five hundred years ago, a Bible accidentally printed with a backwards map of the Holy Land sparked a revolution in how people imagined geography, borders, and even nationhood. Despite the blunder, the ...