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This article is about the city in the West Bank. For other articles subjects named Bethlehem, see Bethlehem (disambiguation).

Bethlehem ( Arabic بيت لحم Bayt Laḥm "house of meat"; בית לחם "house of bread", Standard Hebrew Bet léḥem / Bet láḥem, Tiberian Hebrew Bêṯ léḥem / Bêṯ lāḥem) is a Palestinian city in the West Bank. Under the Oslo accords, Israel handed over Bethlehem to the Palestinian Authority in 1995.

Bethlehem is about 10 kilometers south of Jerusalem, standing at an elevation of about 765 meters above the sea, thus 30 meters higher than Jerusalem. The Bethlehem agglomeration also covers the small towns of Beit Jala and Beit Sahour , the latter also having biblical significance. Bethlehem is home to a university [1].

Section of the West Bank barrier in Beit Sahour (Bethlehem) Bethlehem has great significance to the Christian religion as it is the place where Jesus of Nazareth is said to have been born. The city's populated area and its attached suburbs are immediately adjacent the traditional site of RachelFor the 19th-century French actress, see Rachel (actress). For the Israeli poetess, see Rachel (poet). In the Book of Genesis, Rachel "Ewe", Standard Hebrew Rael Tiberian Hebrew Rel Rel is the second and favourite wife of Jacob and mother of Joseph and Be's tomb which is important in JudaismJudaism is the religion and culture of the Jewish people and the first recorded monotheistic faith. The tenets and history of Judaism constitute the historical foundation of many other religions, including Christianity and Islam. Star of David, a common s. Bethlehem is also home to one of largest communities of Palestinian Christians remaining in the Middle East.

There is a Christian church still existing, built by Constantine the Great (A.D. 330), called the " Church of the NativityThe Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem is one of the oldest continuously operating churches in the world. The original structure was built by Bishop Makarios of Jerusalem at the direction of Constantine I of the Roman Empire following the First Council o," over a grotto or cave called the "holy crypt," and said to be the "stable" in which Jesus was born. This is perhaps the oldest existing Christian church in the world. Close to it is another grotto, where JeromeFor other uses see: Jerome (disambiguation Jerome (about 340 September 30, 420), (full name Eusebius Sophronius Hieronymus is best known as the translator of the Bible from Greek and Hebrew into Latin. Jerome's edition, the Vulgate, is still the official the Latin father is said to have spent thirty years of his life in translating the Scriptures into Latin. (See VulgateThe Vulgate Bible is an early 5th century translation of the Bible into Latin made by St. Jerome on the orders of Pope Damasus I. It takes its name from the phrase vulgata editio "the edition for the people" (cf. Vulgar Latin), and was written in an every).



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