List of Israeli officials between 1 AD and 1945

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David Horowitz, editor of that rag, ex communist (maybe Marxist), turned far right winger when he realised there was more cash in it.

Yep, that's worth a read - not.


I have found it amusing how the Muslims can't seem to accept anything when it has been written by a Jew or someone else who is pro Israel and invariably make a negative comment, but they sure lap up the things written by other Muslims and anti-Semites. How about, Fred, something written about a man who has direct contact with the Iranian Jews? Would you believe him or would you dismiss what he has to say because he happens to be a Jew. Frank Nikbakht is the cousin of an Iranian Jew who used to post on a discussion board. Why not research what he has to say about the Jews still living in Iran?
And yet those of us workin' the other side of the fence are supposed to accept as Gospel Truth anything generated by any of the scores of Muslim-Arab Yellow Journalism Rags that they cite so often. Pffffffttt.
 
.

And there is is.
Yup, And there it is:

Jewish leaders in the land of Israel

House of Saul

King Saul (c. 1079–1007 BCE)
King Ishbosheth (II Samuel 2:8–9)

House of David

King David (II Samuel 5:3) c. 1004–970 BCE – who made Jerusalem the capital of the United Kingdom of Israel.
King Solomon (I Kings 2:12)
King Rehoboam (I Kings 11:43)

After Rehoboam
After Rehoboam reigned three years (1 Chronicles 11:17), the kingdom was divided in two – the northern kingdom of Israel under Jeroboam, with its capital, first in Shechem (Nablus), then Tirzah, and finally Samaria, and ruled by a series of dynasties beginning with Jeroboam; and the southern kingdom of Judah with its capital still at Jerusalem and still ruled by the House of David. The following list contains the kings of Judah with the kings of Israel in the summaries:
King Abijah (I Kings 14:31) c. 915–913 BCE
King Asa (I Kings 15:8) – under whose reign, the following were kings in Israel: Nadab, Baasha, Elah, Zimri, Omri, and Ahab.
King Jehoshaphat (I Kings 15:24) – under whose reign, Ahaziah and Yehoram reigned in Israel.
King Yehoram ben Yehoshaphat (I Kings 22:50)
King Ahaziah ben Yehoram (II Kings 8:24) – under whose reign, Jehu ruled in Israel.
Queen Athaliah (II Kings 11:3) mother of Ahaziah
King Yehoash (II Kings 11:21) – son of Ahaziah, under whose reign, Yehoahaz and another Yehoash ruled in Israel.
King Amaziah (II Kings 14:1) – under whose reign, Jeroboam II ruled in Israel.
King Uzziah referred to as Azariah (II Kings 15:1) – under whose reign, the following ruled over Israel: Zachariah, Shallum, Menahem, Pekahiah, and Pekah.
King Yotam (II Kings 15:32)
King Ahaz (II Kings 16:1) – under whose reign, Hoshea ruled as the last king of Israel.
King Hezekiah (II Kings 18:1) – under his reign, the Assyrian Empire conquered and destroyed the northern kingdom 722 BCE leaving only the southern kingdom of Judah.
King Manasseh (II Kings 20:21)
King Amon (II Kings 21:18)
King Josiah (II Kings 21:26)
King Yehoahaz (II Kings 23:30) son of Josiah
King Yakim (II Kings 23:34) son of Josiah
King Yachin (II Kings 24:6) son of Jehoiakim
King Zedekiah (II Kings 24:17) – son of Josiah, last king to rule over, and in, Judah. Overthrown by Babylonia (which succeeded Assyria) and exiled, along with most of the rest of the population, to that kingdom, where he was executed.
Gedaliah (II Kings 25:22–23) son of Ahikam advisor to King Josiah; he became governor over the remnant of Judah in their homeland and was assassinated the next year.

Governors of the Persian Province of Judea

Zerubbabel (Ezra 3:8) son of Shealtiel. In the first year of the reign of Cyrus, successor to Darius, the Jews were allowed to return to their homeland. Zerubbabel led the first group of returnees and ruled in Judea for two years. The date is generally thought to have been between 538 and 520 BC.[1] The House of David had survived, but struggled to reclaim its place as the ruling House of Israel.
Nehemiah (Book of Nehemiah) arrived in Jerusalem in 445 as governor of Judah, appointed by Artaxerxes.
Hananiah (Nehemiah 7:2)

Hasmonean dynasty 168–37 BCE

Queen Salome Alexandra from "Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum " 1553
Hasmonean dynasty
The Maccabees founded the Hasmonean dynasty, which ruled from 168 BCE – 37 BCE, reasserting the Jewish religion and expanding the boundaries of the Land of Israel by conquest.[3] In the post-Maccabean period the high priest was looked upon as exercising in all things, political, legal, and sacerdotal, the supreme authority.
Mattityahu – who began a war for independence.
Judah – during whose reign, Alcimus succeeded Menelaeus as high priest.
Jonathan – assumed the high priesthood.
Simon – succeeded his brother Jonathan as high priest and was also installed as ethnarch and commander-in-chief. Under his reign, Judea gained its independence.
John Hyrcanus I – also succeeded as high priest.
Aristobulus – also high priest.
Alexander Jannaeus – high priest and king.
Salome Alexandra
Hyrcanus II – succeeded Alexander as high priest beginning with the rule of Salome.
Aristobulus II – succeeded as high priest. During his reign, Judea lost its independence and passed under the rule of Rome (63 BCE) who overthrew him and reinstalled:
Hyrcanus II as high priest
Antigonus – also high priest

Herodian dynasty (37 BCE – 70 CE)

King Herod Archelaus I, ethnarch of Samaria, Judea, and Edom from 4 BC to 6 AD
Main article: Herodian dynasty
King Herod the Great
King Herod Archelaus (4 BCE – 6 CE), Ethnarch of the Tetrarchy of Judea
After Archelaus and during the intervening period, the Sanhedrin, founded by Ezra, became the sole rulers of the Jewish people in Judea in conjunction with the High Priest. The heads, or nesiim, of the Sanhedrin beginning in 20 BCE, was Hillel the Elder, his son Shimon, and his son Gamaliel I whose rule extended into the reign of: Coin minted by king Herod Agrippa I.
King Agrippa I (41–44)
King Herod II (44–48)
King Agrippa II (48–73). In 66 CE, the great revolt began against Rome, resulting in the Zealot Temple Siege and culminating in the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE, the abolition of the High Priesthood, and the final defeat at Massada in 73. Agrippa II was exiled to Rome during the revolt where he died.

Palestinian Patriarchate 80–429 CE

The Palestinian Patriarchate was the governing legalistic body of Palestinian Jewry after the destruction of the Second Temple until about 429 CE. Being a member of the house of Hillel and thus a descendant of King David, the Patriarch, known in Hebrew as the Nasi (prince), enjoyed almost royal authority.
Gamaliel II of Jamnia (80–115)
Eleazar ben Azariah (115–120)
Interregnum (Bar Kokhba revolt) (132–135)
Judah bar Ilai c. 140 moved the Sanhedrin to Usha
Shimon ben Gamliel II
Judah I haNasi (170–220) – ruled from Bet Shearim, then Sepphoris
Gamaliel III (220–230)
Judah II (230–270) – ruled from Sepphoris, then Tiberias. This was the Sanhedrin’s last move.
Gamaliel IV (270–290)
Judah III (290–320)
Hillel II (320–365) – 320 is given as the traditional date for the codification of the "Palestinian" Talmud
Gamliel V (365–385)
Judah IV (385–400) – in 395, the Roman Empire split into east and west and Palestine passed under the eastern Byzantine Empire.
Gamaliel VI (400–425) – on 17 October 415, an edict issued by the Emperors Honorius and Theodosius II deposed Gamaliel VI as nasi. Theodosius did not allow the appointment of a successor and in 429 terminated the Jewish patriarchate.[6]

Hacham Bashi (1842–1918)

Hakham Bashi is the Ottoman Turkish name for the Chief Rabbi of the nation's Jewish community.
Avraham Haim Gaggin (b. Turkey) 1842–1848
Isaac Kovo 1848–1854
Haim Abulafia 1854–1860
Haim Hazzan (b. Turkey) 1860–1869
Avraham Ashkenazi (b. Greece) 1869–1880
Raphael Meir Panigel (b. Bulgaria) 1880–1893
Jacob Saul Elyashar 1893–1906
Jacob Meir 1906–1907
Elijah Moses Panigel 1907–1908
Nahman Batito 1908–1915
Nissim Danon 1915–1918 – In 1917, Palestine was conquered by the British. Danon was succeeded as chief rabbi after WWI by Haim Moshe Eliashar who assumed the title of Acting Chief Rabbi 1918–1921. (For a list of Chief Rabbis during the Mandate and afterwards, see Wikipedia article "Chief Rabbinate of Israel – List of Chief Rabbis (Mandatory Palestine – State of Israel).) They controlled religious affairs while:

The Jewish National Council (1917–1948)

Yitzhak Ben Zvi, chairman of the Jewish National Council, 1931–1948
The Jewish National Council (Vaad Leumi) controlled civil affairs, as defined by a British Mandatory Ordinance. The following list contains the elected chairmen of the Jewish National Council.[9]
Yaacov Thon (b. Ukraine) 1917–1920 – head of a provisional council which preceded the actual formation of the Vaad Leumi in 1920.
David Yellin 1920–1929
Pinhas Rutenberg (b. Ukraine) 1929–1931
Yitzhak Ben Zvi (b. Ukraine) – elected as chairman in the 1931 elections, held the office until independence in 1948. In 1939, Pinhas Rutenberg was, once again, appointed chairman of the Va'ad while Ben Zvi became President. He held that position until his death in 1942. In the 1944 elections, *David Remez (b. Ukraine), was elected as chairman while ben Zvi continued with the title of President.
 
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The fact the Palestians were ruled by a colonial power doesn't mean they weren't there.
Indeed, jews were there.
Jewish rule was by mass immigration, displacing the Arab population and terrorism.
"So far from being persecuted, the Arabs have crowded into the country and multiplied till their population has increased more than even all world Jewry could lift up the Jewish population." Winnie Churchill.
 
According to the Bible, obviously not a reliable source of anything, BUT since it is what the "jewish/khazar/zionism" insanity is based on, the Twelve TRibes of Israel were originally from Saudi Arabia. They only occupied Palestine for a small amount of time. ANd funnily enough "Ancient ISrael" (10 of the tribes) was at war with "Judah" (two tribes). No ADL, SPLC back then apparently. :lol: So many layers of bullshit. All those flying white and blue occult symbol flags waving don't prove King David ever existed.
 
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According to the Bible, obviously not a reliable source of anything, BUT since it is what the "jewish/khazar/zionism" insanity is based on, the Twelve TRibes of Israel were originally from Saudi Arabia. They only occupied Palestine for a small amount of time. ANd funnily enough "Ancient ISrael" (10 of the tribes) was at war with "Judah" (two tribes). No ADL, SPLC back then apparently. :lol: So many layers of bullshit. All those flying white and blue occult symbol flags waving don't prove King David ever existed.

David founded the Davidic dynasty, which ruled Judah/Judea for hundreds of years. I have seen, with my own eyes, coins and seals inscribed with the words "House of David", so it's highly unlikely that David, as an historical person, never existed.
 
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.

And there is is.
Yup, And there it is:

Jewish leaders in the land of Israel

House of Saul

King Saul (c. 1079–1007 BCE)
King Ishbosheth (II Samuel 2:8–9)

House of David

King David (II Samuel 5:3) c. 1004–970 BCE – who made Jerusalem the capital of the United Kingdom of Israel.
King Solomon (I Kings 2:12)
King Rehoboam (I Kings 11:43)

After Rehoboam
After Rehoboam reigned three years (1 Chronicles 11:17), the kingdom was divided in two – the northern kingdom of Israel under Jeroboam, with its capital, first in Shechem (Nablus), then Tirzah, and finally Samaria, and ruled by a series of dynasties beginning with Jeroboam; and the southern kingdom of Judah with its capital still at Jerusalem and still ruled by the House of David. The following list contains the kings of Judah with the kings of Israel in the summaries:
King Abijah (I Kings 14:31) c. 915–913 BCE
King Asa (I Kings 15:8) – under whose reign, the following were kings in Israel: Nadab, Baasha, Elah, Zimri, Omri, and Ahab.
King Jehoshaphat (I Kings 15:24) – under whose reign, Ahaziah and Yehoram reigned in Israel.
King Yehoram ben Yehoshaphat (I Kings 22:50)
King Ahaziah ben Yehoram (II Kings 8:24) – under whose reign, Jehu ruled in Israel.
Queen Athaliah (II Kings 11:3) mother of Ahaziah
King Yehoash (II Kings 11:21) – son of Ahaziah, under whose reign, Yehoahaz and another Yehoash ruled in Israel.
King Amaziah (II Kings 14:1) – under whose reign, Jeroboam II ruled in Israel.
King Uzziah referred to as Azariah (II Kings 15:1) – under whose reign, the following ruled over Israel: Zachariah, Shallum, Menahem, Pekahiah, and Pekah.
King Yotam (II Kings 15:32)
King Ahaz (II Kings 16:1) – under whose reign, Hoshea ruled as the last king of Israel.
King Hezekiah (II Kings 18:1) – under his reign, the Assyrian Empire conquered and destroyed the northern kingdom 722 BCE leaving only the southern kingdom of Judah.
King Manasseh (II Kings 20:21)
King Amon (II Kings 21:18)
King Josiah (II Kings 21:26)
King Yehoahaz (II Kings 23:30) son of Josiah
King Yakim (II Kings 23:34) son of Josiah
King Yachin (II Kings 24:6) son of Jehoiakim
King Zedekiah (II Kings 24:17) – son of Josiah, last king to rule over, and in, Judah. Overthrown by Babylonia (which succeeded Assyria) and exiled, along with most of the rest of the population, to that kingdom, where he was executed.
Gedaliah (II Kings 25:22–23) son of Ahikam advisor to King Josiah; he became governor over the remnant of Judah in their homeland and was assassinated the next year.

Governors of the Persian Province of Judea

Zerubbabel (Ezra 3:8) son of Shealtiel. In the first year of the reign of Cyrus, successor to Darius, the Jews were allowed to return to their homeland. Zerubbabel led the first group of returnees and ruled in Judea for two years. The date is generally thought to have been between 538 and 520 BC.[1] The House of David had survived, but struggled to reclaim its place as the ruling House of Israel.
Nehemiah (Book of Nehemiah) arrived in Jerusalem in 445 as governor of Judah, appointed by Artaxerxes.
Hananiah (Nehemiah 7:2)

Hasmonean dynasty 168–37 BCE

Queen Salome Alexandra from "Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum " 1553
Hasmonean dynasty
The Maccabees founded the Hasmonean dynasty, which ruled from 168 BCE – 37 BCE, reasserting the Jewish religion and expanding the boundaries of the Land of Israel by conquest.[3] In the post-Maccabean period the high priest was looked upon as exercising in all things, political, legal, and sacerdotal, the supreme authority.
Mattityahu – who began a war for independence.
Judah – during whose reign, Alcimus succeeded Menelaeus as high priest.
Jonathan – assumed the high priesthood.
Simon – succeeded his brother Jonathan as high priest and was also installed as ethnarch and commander-in-chief. Under his reign, Judea gained its independence.
John Hyrcanus I – also succeeded as high priest.
Aristobulus – also high priest.
Alexander Jannaeus – high priest and king.
Salome Alexandra
Hyrcanus II – succeeded Alexander as high priest beginning with the rule of Salome.
Aristobulus II – succeeded as high priest. During his reign, Judea lost its independence and passed under the rule of Rome (63 BCE) who overthrew him and reinstalled:
Hyrcanus II as high priest
Antigonus – also high priest

Herodian dynasty (37 BCE – 70 CE)

King Herod Archelaus I, ethnarch of Samaria, Judea, and Edom from 4 BC to 6 AD
Main article: Herodian dynasty
King Herod the Great
King Herod Archelaus (4 BCE – 6 CE), Ethnarch of the Tetrarchy of Judea
After Archelaus and during the intervening period, the Sanhedrin, founded by Ezra, became the sole rulers of the Jewish people in Judea in conjunction with the High Priest. The heads, or nesiim, of the Sanhedrin beginning in 20 BCE, was Hillel the Elder, his son Shimon, and his son Gamaliel I whose rule extended into the reign of: Coin minted by king Herod Agrippa I.
King Agrippa I (41–44)
King Herod II (44–48)
King Agrippa II (48–73). In 66 CE, the great revolt began against Rome, resulting in the Zealot Temple Siege and culminating in the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE, the abolition of the High Priesthood, and the final defeat at Massada in 73. Agrippa II was exiled to Rome during the revolt where he died.

Palestinian Patriarchate 80–429 CE

The Palestinian Patriarchate was the governing legalistic body of Palestinian Jewry after the destruction of the Second Temple until about 429 CE. Being a member of the house of Hillel and thus a descendant of King David, the Patriarch, known in Hebrew as the Nasi (prince), enjoyed almost royal authority.
Gamaliel II of Jamnia (80–115)
Eleazar ben Azariah (115–120)
Interregnum (Bar Kokhba revolt) (132–135)
Judah bar Ilai c. 140 moved the Sanhedrin to Usha
Shimon ben Gamliel II
Judah I haNasi (170–220) – ruled from Bet Shearim, then Sepphoris
Gamaliel III (220–230)
Judah II (230–270) – ruled from Sepphoris, then Tiberias. This was the Sanhedrin’s last move.
Gamaliel IV (270–290)
Judah III (290–320)
Hillel II (320–365) – 320 is given as the traditional date for the codification of the "Palestinian" Talmud
Gamliel V (365–385)
Judah IV (385–400) – in 395, the Roman Empire split into east and west and Palestine passed under the eastern Byzantine Empire.
Gamaliel VI (400–425) – on 17 October 415, an edict issued by the Emperors Honorius and Theodosius II deposed Gamaliel VI as nasi. Theodosius did not allow the appointment of a successor and in 429 terminated the Jewish patriarchate.[6]

Hacham Bashi (1842–1918)

Hakham Bashi is the Ottoman Turkish name for the Chief Rabbi of the nation's Jewish community.
Avraham Haim Gaggin (b. Turkey) 1842–1848
Isaac Kovo 1848–1854
Haim Abulafia 1854–1860
Haim Hazzan (b. Turkey) 1860–1869
Avraham Ashkenazi (b. Greece) 1869–1880
Raphael Meir Panigel (b. Bulgaria) 1880–1893
Jacob Saul Elyashar 1893–1906
Jacob Meir 1906–1907
Elijah Moses Panigel 1907–1908
Nahman Batito 1908–1915
Nissim Danon 1915–1918 – In 1917, Palestine was conquered by the British. Danon was succeeded as chief rabbi after WWI by Haim Moshe Eliashar who assumed the title of Acting Chief Rabbi 1918–1921. (For a list of Chief Rabbis during the Mandate and afterwards, see Wikipedia article "Chief Rabbinate of Israel – List of Chief Rabbis (Mandatory Palestine – State of Israel).) They controlled religious affairs while:

The Jewish National Council (1917–1948)

Yitzhak Ben Zvi, chairman of the Jewish National Council, 1931–1948
The Jewish National Council (Vaad Leumi) controlled civil affairs, as defined by a British Mandatory Ordinance. The following list contains the elected chairmen of the Jewish National Council.[9]
Yaacov Thon (b. Ukraine) 1917–1920 – head of a provisional council which preceded the actual formation of the Vaad Leumi in 1920.
David Yellin 1920–1929
Pinhas Rutenberg (b. Ukraine) 1929–1931
Yitzhak Ben Zvi (b. Ukraine) – elected as chairman in the 1931 elections, held the office until independence in 1948. In 1939, Pinhas Rutenberg was, once again, appointed chairman of the Va'ad while Ben Zvi became President. He held that position until his death in 1942. In the 1944 elections, *David Remez (b. Ukraine), was elected as chairman while ben Zvi continued with the title of President.

Excellent post. Before Saul became the first king of Israel, there were also a series of Judges, which included Samson, Samuel, Deborah, Gideon and Jephthah. They succeeded Joshua and Moses.
Take notice, that in Roudy's post, there is one continuous line of Jewish leaders in Israel/Palestine/Judea from King Saul to the present day.
 
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.

And there is is.
Yup, And there it is:

Jewish leaders in the land of Israel

King Saul (c. 1079–1007 BCE)
King Ishbosheth (II Samuel 2:8–9)

Moving down to (because they were all BC
King Agrippa I (41–44)
King Herod II (44–48)
King Agrippa II (48–73). In 66 CE, the great revolt began against Rome, resulting in the Zealot Temple Siege and culminating in the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE, the abolition of the High Priesthood, and the final defeat at Massada in 73. Agrippa II was exiled to Rome during the revolt where he died.

Palestinian Patriarchate 80–429 CE
The Palestinian Patriarchate was the governing legalistic body of Palestinian Jewry

Jews, no one else. Hardly government.

What, Palestinian leaders? Roudy, stop making my case for me; you'll look silly.
By the way, did you mention the official state religion of Palestine was Christianity.

Gamaliel II of Jamnia (80–115)
Eleazar ben Azariah (115–120)
Interregnum (Bar Kokhba revolt) (132–135)
Judah bar Ilai c. 140 moved the Sanhedrin to Usha
Shimon ben Gamliel II
Judah I haNasi (170–220) – ruled from Bet Shearim, then Sepphoris
Gamaliel III (220–230)
Judah II (230–270) – ruled from Sepphoris, then Tiberias. This was the Sanhedrin’s last move.
Gamaliel IV (270–290)
Judah III (290–320)
Hillel II (320–365) – 320 is given as the traditional date for the codification of the "Palestinian" Talmud
Gamliel V (365–385)
Judah IV (385–400) – in 395, the Roman Empire split into east and west and Palestine passed under the eastern Byzantine Empire.
Gamaliel VI (400–425) – on 17 October 415, an edict issued by the Emperors Honorius and Theodosius II deposed Gamaliel VI as nasi. Theodosius did not allow the appointment of a successor and in 429 terminated the Jewish patriarchate.[6]

Hacham Bashi (1842–1918)

Hakham Bashi is the Ottoman Turkish name for the Chief Rabbi of the nation's Jewish community.
Avraham Haim Gaggin (b. Turkey) 1842–1848
Isaac Kovo 1848–1854
Haim Abulafia 1854–1860
Haim Hazzan (b. Turkey) 1860–1869
Avraham Ashkenazi (b. Greece) 1869–1880
Raphael Meir Panigel (b. Bulgaria) 1880–1893
Jacob Saul Elyashar 1893–1906
Jacob Meir 1906–1907
Elijah Moses Panigel 1907–1908
Nahman Batito 1908–1915
Nissim Danon 1915–1918 – In 1917, Palestine was conquered by the British. Danon was succeeded as chief rabbi after WWI by Haim Moshe Eliashar who assumed the title of Acting Chief Rabbi 1918–1921. (For a list of Chief Rabbis during the Mandate and afterwards, see Wikipedia article "Chief Rabbinate of Israel – List of Chief Rabbis (Mandatory Palestine – State of Israel).) They controlled religious affairs while:

The Jewish National Council (1917–1948)

Yitzhak Ben Zvi, chairman of the Jewish National Council, 1931–1948
The Jewish National Council (Vaad Leumi) controlled civil affairs, as defined by a British Mandatory Ordinance. The following list contains the elected chairmen of the Jewish National Council.[9]
Yaacov Thon (b. Ukraine) 1917–1920 – head of a provisional council which preceded the actual formation of the Vaad Leumi in 1920.
David Yellin 1920–1929
Pinhas Rutenberg (b. Ukraine) 1929–1931
Yitzhak Ben Zvi (b. Ukraine) – elected as chairman in the 1931 elections, held the office until independence in 1948. In 1939, Pinhas Rutenberg was, once again, appointed chairman of the Va'ad while Ben Zvi became President. He held that position until his death in 1942. In the 1944 elections, *David Remez (b. Ukraine), was elected as chairman while ben Zvi continued with the title of President.

and so on.

A list of Jewish community leaders, not government as such.
More collaborators or, perhaps, Quislings.
 
Fred, how does it feel to have gotten completely owned and made a fool of on a thread topic that you started ?
 
Fred, how does it feel to have gotten completely owned and made a fool of on a thread topic that you started ?

I have no idea as no one has managed to publish anything showing there was an Israeli government, just a list of quislings, doing the bidding of occupying forces.
 
Fred, how does it feel to have gotten completely owned and made a fool of on a thread topic that you started ?

I have no idea as no one has managed to publish anything showing there was an Israeli government, just a list of quislings, doing the bidding of occupying forces.

What occupying forces ? WTF are you blabbing about ?

You lost. Get over it
 
Fred, how does it feel to have gotten completely owned and made a fool of on a thread topic that you started ?

I have no idea as no one has managed to publish anything showing there was an Israeli government, just a list of quislings, doing the bidding of occupying forces.

What occupying forces ? WTF are you blabbing about ?

You lost. Get over it

We could start with the countries that occupied Palestine over the years.
Now, who destroyed the second temple?
and does the Ottoman empire ring any bells?

Jesus, thick isn't close.
 
I have no idea as no one has managed to publish anything showing there was an Israeli government, just a list of quislings, doing the bidding of occupying forces.

What occupying forces ? WTF are you blabbing about ?

You lost. Get over it

We could start with the countries that occupied Palestine over the years.
Now, who destroyed the second temple?
and does the Ottoman empire ring any bells?

Jesus, thick isn't close.

Nevermind, I misunderstood who you meant by occupations.

Anyway, what was the point of this thread ?
 
.

And there is is.
Yup, And there it is:

Jewish leaders in the land of Israel

King Saul (c. 1079–1007 BCE)
King Ishbosheth (II Samuel 2:8–9)

Moving down to (because they were all BC
King Agrippa I (41–44)
King Herod II (44–48)
King Agrippa II (48–73). In 66 CE, the great revolt began against Rome, resulting in the Zealot Temple Siege and culminating in the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE, the abolition of the High Priesthood, and the final defeat at Massada in 73. Agrippa II was exiled to Rome during the revolt where he died.

Palestinian Patriarchate 80–429 CE
The Palestinian Patriarchate was the governing legalistic body of Palestinian Jewry

Jews, no one else. Hardly government.

What, Palestinian leaders? Roudy, stop making my case for me; you'll look silly.
By the way, did you mention the official state religion of Palestine was Christianity.

Gamaliel II of Jamnia (80–115)
Eleazar ben Azariah (115–120)
Interregnum (Bar Kokhba revolt) (132–135)
Judah bar Ilai c. 140 moved the Sanhedrin to Usha
Shimon ben Gamliel II
Judah I haNasi (170–220) – ruled from Bet Shearim, then Sepphoris
Gamaliel III (220–230)
Judah II (230–270) – ruled from Sepphoris, then Tiberias. This was the Sanhedrin’s last move.
Gamaliel IV (270–290)
Judah III (290–320)
Hillel II (320–365) – 320 is given as the traditional date for the codification of the "Palestinian" Talmud
Gamliel V (365–385)
Judah IV (385–400) – in 395, the Roman Empire split into east and west and Palestine passed under the eastern Byzantine Empire.
Gamaliel VI (400–425) – on 17 October 415, an edict issued by the Emperors Honorius and Theodosius II deposed Gamaliel VI as nasi. Theodosius did not allow the appointment of a successor and in 429 terminated the Jewish patriarchate.[6]

Hacham Bashi (1842–1918)

Hakham Bashi is the Ottoman Turkish name for the Chief Rabbi of the nation's Jewish community.
Avraham Haim Gaggin (b. Turkey) 1842–1848
Isaac Kovo 1848–1854
Haim Abulafia 1854–1860
Haim Hazzan (b. Turkey) 1860–1869
Avraham Ashkenazi (b. Greece) 1869–1880
Raphael Meir Panigel (b. Bulgaria) 1880–1893
Jacob Saul Elyashar 1893–1906
Jacob Meir 1906–1907
Elijah Moses Panigel 1907–1908
Nahman Batito 1908–1915
Nissim Danon 1915–1918 – In 1917, Palestine was conquered by the British. Danon was succeeded as chief rabbi after WWI by Haim Moshe Eliashar who assumed the title of Acting Chief Rabbi 1918–1921. (For a list of Chief Rabbis during the Mandate and afterwards, see Wikipedia article "Chief Rabbinate of Israel – List of Chief Rabbis (Mandatory Palestine – State of Israel).) They controlled religious affairs while:

The Jewish National Council (1917–1948)

Yitzhak Ben Zvi, chairman of the Jewish National Council, 1931–1948
The Jewish National Council (Vaad Leumi) controlled civil affairs, as defined by a British Mandatory Ordinance. The following list contains the elected chairmen of the Jewish National Council.[9]
Yaacov Thon (b. Ukraine) 1917–1920 – head of a provisional council which preceded the actual formation of the Vaad Leumi in 1920.
David Yellin 1920–1929
Pinhas Rutenberg (b. Ukraine) 1929–1931
Yitzhak Ben Zvi (b. Ukraine) – elected as chairman in the 1931 elections, held the office until independence in 1948. In 1939, Pinhas Rutenberg was, once again, appointed chairman of the Va'ad while Ben Zvi became President. He held that position until his death in 1942. In the 1944 elections, *David Remez (b. Ukraine), was elected as chairman while ben Zvi continued with the title of President.

and so on.

A list of Jewish community leaders, not government as such.
More collaborators or, perhaps, Quislings.
You claimed there were no Jewish leaders and officials, and I presented you with a historical list, and humiliated you.

Now stand still while I remove my foot from your filthy lying Islamic ass. LOL
 
You claimed there were no Jewish leaders and officials, and I presented you with a historical list, and humiliated you.

Now stand still while I remove my foot from your filthy lying Islamic ass. LOL

I'm sorry you're so ******* stupid, you can't do simple reading comprehension.

Thread title said:
List of Israeli officials between 1 AD and 1945

I asked for Israeli officials, not cowardly quisling Jews who got into bed with their occupying masters.

So, can you produce any?
 
You claimed there were no Jewish leaders and officials, and I presented you with a historical list, and humiliated you.

Now stand still while I remove my foot from your filthy lying Islamic ass. LOL

I'm sorry you're so ******* stupid, you can't do simple reading comprehension.

Thread title said:
List of Israeli officials between 1 AD and 1945

I asked for Israeli officials, not cowardly quisling Jews who got into bed with their occupying masters.

So, can you produce any?
Just did. Those were Israeli officials, or officials who represented the people of Israel who had been invaded or under occupation. Therefore confirming a direct line of Jewish presence from the ancient Jews to today.

Go back and tell your mosque imam he fed you total bullshit, you ignorant donkey.
 
15th post
You claimed there were no Jewish leaders and officials, and I presented you with a historical list, and humiliated you.

Now stand still while I remove my foot from your filthy lying Islamic ass. LOL

I'm sorry you're so ******* stupid, you can't do simple reading comprehension.

Thread title said:
List of Israeli officials between 1 AD and 1945

I asked for Israeli officials, not cowardly quisling Jews who got into bed with their occupying masters.

So, can you produce any?
Just did. Those were Israeli officials, or officials who represented the people of Israel who had been invaded or under occupation. Therefore confirming a direct line of Jewish presence from the ancient Jews to today.

Go back and tell your mosque imam he fed you total bullshit, you ignorant donkey.
How many Jews lived in Palestine in 1920, Jackal?

"In 1920, the League of Nations' Interim Report on the Civil Administration of Palestine stated that there were hardly 700,000 people living in Palestine:

"There are now in the whole of Palestine hardly 700,000 people, a population much less than that of the province of Gallilee alone in the time of Christ. Of these 235,000 live in the larger towns, 465,000 in the smaller towns and villages.

"Four-fifths of the whole population are Moslems.

"A small proportion of these are Bedouin Arabs; the remainder, although they speak Arabic and are termed Arabs, are largely of mixed race. Some 77,000 of the population are Christians, in large majority belonging to the Orthodox Church, and speaking Arabic. The minority are members of the Latin or of the Uniate Greek Catholic Church, or--a small number--are Protestants.

"The Jewish element of the population numbers 76,000.

Demographics of Palestine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ready for the big BATH, Golda?
 
How many Jews lived in Palestine in 1920, Jackal?
"So far from being persecuted, the Arabs have crowded into the country and multiplied till their population has increased more than even all world Jewry could lift up the Jewish population." Winnie Churchill.
 
I'm sorry you're so ******* stupid, you can't do simple reading comprehension.



I asked for Israeli officials, not cowardly quisling Jews who got into bed with their occupying masters.

So, can you produce any?
Just did. Those were Israeli officials, or officials who represented the people of Israel who had been invaded or under occupation. Therefore confirming a direct line of Jewish presence from the ancient Jews to today.

Go back and tell your mosque imam he fed you total bullshit, you ignorant donkey.
How many Jews lived in Palestine in 1920, Jackal?

"In 1920, the League of Nations' Interim Report on the Civil Administration of Palestine stated that there were hardly 700,000 people living in Palestine:

"There are now in the whole of Palestine hardly 700,000 people, a population much less than that of the province of Gallilee alone in the time of Christ. Of these 235,000 live in the larger towns, 465,000 in the smaller towns and villages.

"Four-fifths of the whole population are Moslems.

"A small proportion of these are Bedouin Arabs; the remainder, although they speak Arabic and are termed Arabs, are largely of mixed race. Some 77,000 of the population are Christians, in large majority belonging to the Orthodox Church, and speaking Arabic. The minority are members of the Latin or of the Uniate Greek Catholic Church, or--a small number--are Protestants.

"The Jewish element of the population numbers 76,000.

Demographics of Palestine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ready for the big BATH, Golda?
The land was Jewish land for 3000 years and Jews maintained a presence and leadership throughout the millennia. Who cares about Muslims invading and reproducing faster than cockroaches, JACKASS? They're already doing that here in the US and the West. Does that make it THEIR LAND? No.

Fact is, the "four fifths" you are lying about included Jordan. And when Muslims got their Arab Palestine in Jordan, it wasn't four fifths any longer. And then the entire Arab world attacked the newly re established state of Israel, and got their butts handed to them.

Now put your right hand on your chest and repeat after me:

God...Bless...Israel.
 
I have no idea as no one has managed to publish anything showing there was an Israeli government, just a list of quislings, doing the bidding of occupying forces.

What occupying forces ? WTF are you blabbing about ?

You lost. Get over it

We could start with the countries that occupied Palestine over the years.
Now, who destroyed the second temple?
and does the Ottoman empire ring any bells?

Jesus, thick isn't close.
Oh yeah? How about you show us "Palestinian officials" throughout history?!

Oops! Bad question, bad question! Change subject ASAP!

The Arabs who now call themselves "Palestinian" did so in the mid 1960's. ha ha ha.
 
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