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Documents that Changed the World: Annals of the World, 1650
UW Homepage
As shadows lengthened and day turned to night on Saturday, Oct. 22, in the year 4004 BCE, God created the universe. Or, perhaps not.
110 months ago
Review | When the earth’s story defies religious belief
The Washington Post
Timothy R. Smith is a former editorial aide of Book World. In 1650, Archbishop James Ussher of Armagh counted the Bible's begats and...
81 months ago
How Chronologists Moved From Ancient Text To Ancient Earth
Forbes
Poor James Ussher (1581 – 1656), the Archbishop of Armagh, has long been a laughingstock for dating the creation of the world to 6 pm on the...
116 months ago
Editorial: MAIT cells come of age
Frontiers
Mucosal-associated Invariant T (MAIT) cells recognise microbial metabolite-derived anCgens presented by the MHC Class I related (MR1) protein (1,2).
8 months ago
How should New Zealand manage COVID from now – limit all infections or focus on preventing severe disease?
The Conversation
As New Zealand emerges from its Omicron wave, increasing hybrid immunity and access to antivirals mean it's time to shift the focus of COVID...
25 months ago
Universe's 6,000th birthday ...
The Guardian
Britain's geologists are about to celebrate the fact that the universe is exactly 6,000 years old. At 6pm tonight at the Geological Society...
239 months ago
Real History: The Timeline of the Bible
Answers in Genesis
This timeline was printed in Creation magazine to faithfully represent the details provided by the late Archbishop James Ussher in The Annals of the World.
124 months ago
How Long Ago Was the Curse?
Answers in Genesis
Building on last week's article, Bodie Hodge, AiG–U.S., shows how to calculate the age of the earth and the time of the Fall.
124 months ago
Other Times the World Was Going to End and Didn’t (Does This Make Us Due?)
Vanity Fair
1650: James Ussher, an Anglican bishop, writes a chronology of the world that predicts the Second Coming of Christ would be in 2000.
160 months ago
Europe's Diverse Heritage
Trinity College Dublin
The Library of James Ussher (d. 1656), considered the most learned man of his time, formed the basis of the Library in Trinity. This included hundreds of...
42 months ago