(1.00) | (Act 20:3) | 7 sn Macedonia was the Roman province of Macedonia in Greece. |
(1.00) | (Act 20:1) | 3 sn Macedonia was the Roman province of Macedonia in Greece. |
(1.00) | (Act 19:22) | 3 sn Macedonia was the Roman province of Macedonia in Greece. |
(1.00) | (Act 19:21) | 4 sn Macedonia was the Roman province of Macedonia in Greece. |
(1.00) | (Act 18:5) | 2 sn Macedonia was the Roman province of Macedonia in Greece. |
(1.00) | (Act 16:38) | 2 sn Roman citizens. This fact was disturbing to the officials because due process was a right for a Roman citizen, well established in Roman law. To flog a Roman citizen was considered an abomination. Such punishment was reserved for noncitizens. |
(1.00) | (Act 16:12) | 3 sn Macedonia was the Roman province of Macedonia in Greece. |
(1.00) | (Act 16:9) | 5 sn Macedonia was the Roman province of Macedonia in Greece. |
(1.00) | (Act 16:10) | 4 sn Macedonia was the Roman province of Macedonia in Greece. |
(1.00) | (Luk 2:1) | 2 sn This decree was a formal decree from the Roman Senate. |
(1.00) | (Dan 11:18) | 2 sn The commander is probably the Roman commander, Lucius Cornelius Scipio. |
(0.99) | (Act 18:12) | 2 sn The proconsul was the Roman official who ruled over a province traditionally under the control of the Roman senate. |
(0.99) | (Act 14:12) | 2 sn Zeus was the chief Greek deity, worshiped throughout the Greco-Roman world (known to the Romans as Jupiter). |
(0.99) | (Act 13:7) | 1 sn The proconsul was the Roman official who ruled over a province traditionally under the control of the Roman senate. |
(0.99) | (Act 13:8) | 3 sn The proconsul was the Roman official who ruled over a province traditionally under the control of the Roman senate. |
(0.85) | (Act 22:28) | 2 sn Sometimes Roman citizenship was purchased through a bribe (Dio Cassius, Roman History 60.17.4-9). That may well have been the case here. |
(0.85) | (Act 19:40) | 2 tn The term translated “rioting” refers to a revolt or uprising (BDAG 940 s.v. στάσις 2, 3). This would threaten Roman rule and invite Roman intervention. |
(0.85) | (Joh 19:39) | 5 sn The Roman pound (λίτρα, litra) weighed 12 ounces or 325 grams. Thus 100 Roman pounds would be about 32.5 kilograms or 75 pounds. |
(0.80) | (Rom 9:10) | 1 tn Or possibly “by one act of sexual intercourse.” See D. Moo, Romans (NICNT), 579. |
(0.80) | (Act 28:19) | 2 tn Or “to the emperor” (“Caesar” is a title for the Roman emperor). |