Judges
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Judges
Summary
Judges is a religious text[1]. Judges draws 1,242 Wikipedia views per month (religious_text category, ranking #37 of 234).[2]
Key Facts
- Judges's instance of is recorded as religious text[3].
- Judges's instance of is recorded as literary work[4].
- Judges's instance of is recorded as book of the Bible[5].
- Judges followed Joshua[6].
- Judges was followed by Book of Ruth[7].
- Judges is part of Tanakh[8].
- Judges is part of Nevi'im[9].
- Judges is part of Old Testament[10].
- Judges is part of Septuagint[11].
- Judges is part of Catholic Old Testament[12].
- Judges is part of Historical books[13].
- Judges's Commons category is recorded as Book of Judges[14].
- Judges comprises Judges 1[15].
- Judges comprises Judges 2[16].
- Judges comprises Judges 3[17].
- Judges comprises Judges 4[18].
- Judges comprises Judges 5[19].
- Judges comprises Judges 6[20].
- Judges comprises Judges 7[21].
- Judges comprises Judges 8[22].
- Judges comprises Judges 9[23].
- Judges comprises Judges 10[24].
- Judges comprises Judges 11[25].
- Judges comprises Judges 12[26].
- Judges comprises Judges 13[27].
Body
Publication
Part of include Tanakh[8], a biblical canon[28]; Nevi'im[9], a religious text[29]; Old Testament[10], a literary work[30], written by various authors[31]; Septuagint[11], a version, edition or translation[32]; Catholic Old Testament[12]; and Historical books[13], a religious text[33].
Adaptations and Inspiration
Judges followed Joshua[6]. Judges was followed by Book of Ruth[7].
Why It Matters
Judges draws 1,242 Wikipedia views per month (religious_text category, ranking #37 of 234).[2] Judges has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34] Judges is known by 38 alternative names across languages and contexts.[35]