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Listing vocabulary concepts alphabetically
- Jabal (not in biblical context)
- Jabal (not in biblical context) - (other) specific aspects, e.g. allegorical and symbolical aspects of male persons from the Old Testament (not in biblical context)
- Jabal (not in biblical context) - founder, initiator ~ the Old Testament (not in biblical context)
- Jabal (not in biblical context) - legendary/historical addition to life-story of male persons from the Old Testament
- Jabal (not in biblical context) - patron, intercessor ~ the Old Testament (not in biblical context)
- Jabal (not in biblical context) - personal devotions of male persons from the Old Testament, e.g. vision, prayer, penitence
- Jabal (not in biblical context) - post-mortem occurrences of male persons from the Old Testament, e.g. finding and transportation of relics
- Jabal, with Jubal and Tubalcain
- Jabesh-gilead besieged by Nahash and liberated by Saul
- Jacob and Esau are reconciled (Genesis 33)
- Jacob and Esau parting; Esau moves with all his possessions to Edom
- Jacob and his family go to Egypt (Genesis 46:1-27)
- Jacob and his family in Egypt (Genesis 46:28-34, 47:1-12)
- Jacob and his sons settle in the land of Goshen
- Jacob and Laban make an alliance: a pile of stone is erected and an animal is sacrificed
- Jacob and Laban parting
- Jacob and the angel (Genesis 32:24-32)
- Jacob asks Laban's permission to marry Rachel
- Jacob at Bethel (Genesis 28:11-22)
- Jacob at Succoth where he builds a house
- Jacob at the well of Haran (Genesis 29:1-13)
- Jacob awakes, anoints the stone and names the place Bethel
- Jacob becomes very rich
- Jacob blesses his sons
- Jacob blesses Joseph
- Jacob blesses Manasseh and Ephraim with arms crossed; Joseph may be shown trying to uncross them or expressing (with Asenath) his disapproval
- Jacob blesses Manasseh and Ephraim with arms uncrossed
- Jacob blessing Judah: 'Judah is a lion's whelp'
- Jacob bows to the ground
- Jacob bringing the goats to his mother
- Jacob builds an altar
- Jacob buys the field from Hamor's sons for hundred pieces of silver
- Jacob communicating with God (in general)
- Jacob cursing Simeon and Levi
- Jacob divides his people and the animals in two groups and sends some cattle on as a present to Esau
- Jacob gives Joseph a coat of many colours
- Jacob hears that corn is being sold in Egypt
- Jacob informing his wives Leah and Rachel of the departure
- Jacob is accused by Laban's sons
- Jacob is buried in the cave of Machpelah
- Jacob is met by angels at Mahanaim
- Jacob is overtaken (by Laban)
- Jacob is presented to Pharaoh by Joseph
- Jacob is told of Joseph's position
- Jacob kisses Rachel and is moved to tears
- Jacob leaves the house; Esau marries again (Genesis 28:1-10)
- Jacob leaves the room ~ story of Isaac's blessing
- Jacob meditating upon Joseph's dreams
- Jacob meets the shepherds of Haran and their flocks of sheep lying round the well
- Jacob moves the stone which covers the opening of the well and waters Rachel's sheep
- Jacob moves to the tower of Eder, and then to Hebron
- Jacob names the place Peniel
- Jacob offering a sacrifice at Beersheba
- Jacob on the way to Canaan with his family, his flocks, camels and all his possessions
- Jacob prays to God to save him from Esau
- Jacob prepares to meet Esau (Genesis 32:1-23)
- Jacob purges his house of idols
- Jacob puts peeled rods in the animals' drinking troughs to make the beasts bear spotted young
- Jacob rebuking Joseph for his dreams
- Jacob receives a new name, Israel, and is blessed by the angel
- Jacob refuses to have Benjamin taken to Egypt in spite of Reuben's exhortation
- Jacob rending his garments on recognizing the robe
- Jacob reproving his sons
- Jacob requesting Rachel after the seven years
- Jacob sees Rachel coming to the well to water Laban's sheep
- Jacob sends his family and caravan across the river Jabbok, and stays behind
- Jacob sends his ten sons to Egypt to buy corn, keeping the youngest, Benjamin, at home
- Jacob sends Joseph to his brothers, who are taking care of their father's flock at Shechem
- Jacob serving Laban for Rachel and Leah (Genesis 29:14-30)
- Jacob sets up a pillar at Bethel; Jacob consecrates it by pouring oil on it
- Jacob sets up his camp in a field near the city of Shechem
- Jacob threatened by Esau
- Jacob vows exclusive worship to God
- Jacob with his family, livestock and possessions sets out for Egypt with the wagons
- Jacob works as a herdsman for seven years in exchange for Rachel
- Jacob works for Laban seven more years
- Jacob wrestles with the angel (or man) till daybreak; Jacob's thigh is put out of joint
- Jacob's children (Genesis 29:31 - 30:24)
- Jacob's daughter Dinah defiled (Genesis 34)
- Jacob's death (Genesis 49:33, 50:1-14)
- Jacob's farewell
- Jacob's farewell to Benjamin
- Jacob's flight from Laban (Genesis 31:1-21)
- Jacob's journey
- Jacob's journey to Haran
- Jacob's ladder (alone)
- Jacob's last days (Genesis 47:27 - 49:32)
- Jacob's staff (surveying instrument)
- Jacob's stay at Bethel (Genesis 35:1-15)
- Jacob's vision: God appears to him at night and sanctions his journey to Egypt
- Jacob's visit to Isaac ~ death of Isaac
- Jacob's wives and children are introduced to Esau
- Jaddus, the high priest of Jerusalem, appears in a dream to Alexander
- Jael (one of the nine worthiest women)
- Jael kills the sleeping Sisera by hitting the nail through his temples
- Jael takes a nail of the tent and a hammer
- Jahaziel, the Levite, encourages Jehoshaphat to fight the invaders
- Jair's thirty sons who rode on thirty ass colts, and had thirty cities
- James and John taking leave of their father
- James and the pilgrim family
- James appears to Charlemagne
- James arrested and brought before Herod
- James as Moor-slayer ('Matamoros'): on the battle-field of Clavijo he appears on a white horse
- James helping pilgrims
- James is cast from a pulpit while preaching
- James is stoned, or beaten to death (with a fuller's club)
- James leading the community in Jerusalem as their first bishop
- James liberating an innocent merchant from prison
- James preaching
- James preaching to Indians
- James receives the communion or a meal from Christ
- James supports the young pilgrim's feet; he is still alive when his companions return from Santiago
- James thrown from the roof of a temple in Jerusalem
- January - April (year divided into three seasons)
- January - April ~ human activities (year divided into three seasons)
- January - April ~ landscapes (year divided into three seasons)
- January - April ~ other concepts (e.g. biblical scenes) (year divided into three seasons)
- January - April ~ still lifes of flowers and/or fruits (year divided into three seasons)
- January 1 (~ festivities)
- January and February (year divided into six seasons)
- January and February ~ human activities (year divided into six seasons)
- January and February ~ landscapes (year divided into six seasons)
- January and February ~ other concepts (e.g. biblical scenes) (year divided into six seasons)
- January and February ~ still lifes of flowers and/or fruits (year divided into six seasons)
- January and its 'labours'
- January represented by still life of flowers and/or fruits
- January ~ other concepts
- January; 'Gennaro' (Ripa)
- Janus hospitably receiving Saturn
- Janus wooing Juturna
- Janus wooing Venilia
- Janus' head, two-faced head
- Japanese
- jar, jug (used as drinking-vessel)
- Jashobeam the Hachmonite kills eight hundred (or three hundred) enemies
- Jason and Hypsipyle
- Jason and Medea at the altar of Hecate (or Diana): Medea gives him a magic herb or ointment
- Jason and Medea purified from the murder of Apsyrtus by Circe
- Jason and the Argonauts meeting Aeetes, king of Colchis
- Jason back in Iolcus
- Jason becomes king of Corinth
- Jason before his uncle Pelias, wearing only one sandal
- Jason hitches the fire-breathing bulls to the plough
- Jason on his way to Iolcus carries Juno, disguised as an old woman, across the river and loses a sandal
- Jason ploughs all day
- Jason's mother, pretending the child is still-born, smuggles him out of the city to Chiron
- Jason, son of Aeson, in Iolcus
- Jason, tyrant of Pherae, is healed from his incurable abscess by an enemy soldier, who shoots right into the swelling
- javelin-throwing
- jaw (human)
- jaw (human) - AA - female human figure
- Jealousy; 'Gelosia', 'Rammarico del ben'altrui' (Ripa)
- Jehohahaz is taken prisoner by King Necho II and brought to Egypt
- Jehoiachin becomes king
- Jehoiada gathers a group of soldiers, presents Joash to them and persuades them to swear allegiance to him
- Jehoiakim burns Jeremiah's scroll
- Jehoiakim is captured and taken to Babylonia in chains
- Jehoram and his officers are surrounded by the Edomite army but during the night they manage to break out and escape
- Jehoram and his officers set out and invade Edom
- Jehoram becomes king of Judah
- Jehoram goes to Jezreel to recover from his wounds and is visited there by Ahaziah of Judah
- Jehoram has all his brothers slain
- Jehoram marries Athalia, daughter of Ahab and Jezebel of Israel, and allows the Judaean people to worship idols
- Jehoram's attendant expresses doubt
- Jehoram, struck with a disease of the intestines, dies in agony
- Jehoshaphat establishing his kingdom
- Jehoshaphat joins Ahaziah of Israel in the construction of a fleet at Ezion-gaber
- Jehoshaphat prays to God for guidance
- Jehoshaphat receives tribute from the surrounding kings
- Jehoshaphat sends priests to teach the law throughout his kingdom
- Jehoshaphat suppresses, like his father Asa, idolatrous worship
- Jehoshaphat's other military and religious reforms
- Jehu drives his horses over Jezebel's body
- Jehu maintains the worship of the golden calves
- Jehu meets Jehonadab who promises to support him
- Jehu orders Jehoram's body to be thrown in the field that belonged to Naboth
- Jehu plots Jehoram's death with his fellow-officers
- Jehu pretending to want to offer a great sacrifice to Baal, has the prophets of Baal, his worshippers and priests called together
- Jehu's further reign
- Jephthah and the Gileadites defeat the Ephraimites (Judges 12:1-6)
- Jephthah becomes captain of the Gileadites (Judges 11:4-11)
- Jephthah returns home with the elders of Gilead and is made commander of the Gileadites
- Jephthah sends messengers to the king of the Ammonites in an attempt to make a treaty (Judges 11:12-28)
- Jephthah's daughter dances with tambourines to meet her father on his return from the battle; Jephthah rends his clothes in despair
- Jephthah's daughter retreats to the mountains with her companions to bewail her virginity
- Jephthah, son of Gilead, is cast out by his brothers because he is the son of a harlot (Judges 11:1-3)
- Jeremiah (not in biblical context); possible attributes: book or scroll, 'the seething pot'
- Jeremiah (not in biblical context); possible attributes: book or scroll, 'the seething pot' - (other) specific aspects, e.g. allegorical and symbolical aspects of male persons from the Old Testament (not in biblical context)
- Jeremiah (not in biblical context); possible attributes: book or scroll, 'the seething pot' - founder, initiator ~ the Old Testament (not in biblical context)
- Jeremiah (not in biblical context); possible attributes: book or scroll, 'the seething pot' - legendary/historical addition to life-story of male persons from the Old Testament
- Jeremiah (not in biblical context); possible attributes: book or scroll, 'the seething pot' - other activities, relationships, etc. of male persons from the Old Testament
- Jeremiah (not in biblical context); possible attributes: book or scroll, 'the seething pot' - patron, intercessor ~ the Old Testament (not in biblical context)
- Jeremiah (not in biblical context); possible attributes: book or scroll, 'the seething pot' - personal devotions of male persons from the Old Testament, e.g. vision, prayer, penitence
- Jeremiah (not in biblical context); possible attributes: book or scroll, 'the seething pot' - post-mortem occurrences of male persons from the Old Testament, e.g. finding and transportation of relics
- Jeremiah addressing Jerusalem
- Jeremiah advises the captives in Babylon to build houses and to multiply (Jeremiah 29:1-7)
- Jeremiah advises the people not to go to Egypt
- Jeremiah and Baruch (Jeremiah 36)
- Jeremiah and Baruch conceal themselves
- Jeremiah and the Rechabites (Jeremiah 35)
- Jeremiah appears before King Zedekiah with a wooden yoke (Jeremiah 27-28)
- Jeremiah arrested by priests and soldiers
- Jeremiah arrested by the priest Pashur
- Jeremiah before Zedekiah
- Jeremiah brings the Rechabites to a chamber in the temple
- Jeremiah buries the linen girdle in a hole of a rock near the Euphrates
- Jeremiah buys a linen girdle
- Jeremiah buys the field of Anathoth from his cousin Hanamed
- Jeremiah communicating with God
- Jeremiah condemning idolatry (Jeremiah 2-6)
- Jeremiah condemning Israel's apostasy
- Jeremiah condemning Israel's confidence in Egypt and Assyria
- Jeremiah condemning Judah's idolatrous sacrifices
- Jeremiah condemning Judah's insincerity
- Jeremiah condemning the false prophets (Jeremiah 23:9-40)
- Jeremiah condemns the disobedience of the Judaeans
- Jeremiah curses Hananiah
- Jeremiah curses Pashur and prophesies the Babylonian Captivity
- Jeremiah defends himself in a speech
- Jeremiah dictates a second scroll to Baruch
- Jeremiah dictates his prophecies to Baruch
- Jeremiah digs up the linen girdle again; it is marred
- Jeremiah exhorts the Israelites in the temple court (Jeremiah 26)
- Jeremiah exposing idols
- Jeremiah gives the contract of purchase to Baruch
- Jeremiah goes to Gedaliah (Jeremiah 40:6)
- Jeremiah in Egypt
- Jeremiah in the reign of Jehoiachin
- Jeremiah in the reign of Zedekiah
- Jeremiah in the time of Jehoiakim
- Jeremiah in the time of King Josiah
- Jeremiah is arrested in the city gate
- Jeremiah is brought to the court of the prison
- Jeremiah is forced to accompany the Judaeans to Egypt (Jeremiah 43:5-6)
- Jeremiah is put in prison
- Jeremiah is released
- Jeremiah is released from the dungeon
- Jeremiah is released from the stocks
- Jeremiah is tortured
- Jeremiah lamenting over the destruction of Jerusalem
- Jeremiah prays for the Israelites in the time of famine (Jeremiah 14)
- Jeremiah preaching and prophesying in the temple court
- Jeremiah prophesies the captivity in Babylon to Jehoiachin (Jeremiah 22:24-28)
- Jeremiah prophesies the death of Jehoiakim (Jeremiah 36:30-32, 22:13-19)
- Jeremiah prophesies the defeat of Egypt (Jeremiah 43:8-13, 46)
- Jeremiah prophesies the destruction of Babylon (Jeremiah 50-51)
- Jeremiah prophesies the destruction of the other nations (Jeremiah 48-49)
- Jeremiah prophesies the destruction of the Philistines (Jeremiah 47)
- Jeremiah prophesies the future restoration of Israel and Judah (Jeremiah 30-31)
- Jeremiah prophesying the destruction of Jerusalem
Vocabulary information
Title
Iconclass
Subject
Description
Iconclass is a classification system designed for art and iconography. It is the most widely accepted scientific tool for the description and retrieval of subjects represented in images (works of art, book illustrations, reproductions, photographs, etc.) and is used by museums and art institutions around the world.
Homepage
Rights
Contains information from Iconclass, which is made available here under the Open Database License (ODbL).
Language
Last modified
Tuesday, September 16, 2014 06:35:26
Date issued
Friday, October 19, 2012 00:00:00
URI
http://iconclass.org/rdf/2011/09/