Ezekiel

Ezekiel, a Hebrew prophet, born in Jerusalem; a man of priestly descent, who was carried captive to Babylon 599 B.C., and was banished to Tel-abib, on the banks of the Chebar, 201 m. from the city, where, with his family about him, he became the prophet of the captivity, and the rallying centre of the Dispersion. Here he foretold the destruction of Jerusalem as a judgment on the nation, and comforted them with the promise of a new Jerusalem and a new Temple on their repentance, man by man, and their return to the Lord. His prophecies arrange themselves in three groups—those denouncing judgment on Jerusalem, those denouncing judgment on the heathen, and those announcing the future glory of the nation.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Eyre, Jane * Ezra
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“Exodus from Houndsditch,”
Exogens
Exorcism
Exoteric
Externality
Extreme Unction
Eyck, Jan van
Eylau
Eyre, Edward John
Eyre, Jane
Ezekiel
Ezra
Faber, Frederick William
Faber, George Stanley
Fabian, St.
Fabian Society
Fabii
Fabius Pictor
Fabius Quintus
Fabius Quintus
Fabius, The American