Ero sivun ”Daavidintähti” versioiden välillä

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Rivi 1:
{{Juutalaisuus}}
'''Daavidintähti''' ({{k-he|מָגֵן דָּוִד|magen David}} eli kirjaimellisesti ''daavidinkilpi'') on kahdesta päällekkäisestä [[kolmio]]sta koostuva, kuusisakaraisen [[tähti (täsmennyssivu)|tähden]] muotoinen kuvio. Daavidintähti on perinteisesti [[juutalaisuus|juutalaisuuden]] tunnus: se esiintyy muun muassa [[Israelin lippu|Israelin lipussa]]. Geometrisesti kuvio on [[kuusikanta]] eli heksagrammi, joka tunetaantunnetaan myös [[Salomonin sinetti]]nä.<ref>"Solomon" , Jewish Encyclopedia: "Solomon is represented as having authority over spirits, animals, wind, and water, all of which obeyed his orders by virtue of a magic ring set with the four jewels given him by the angels that had power over these four realms. [...] It was Solomon's custom to take off the ring when he was about to wash, and to give it to one of his wives, Amina, to hold. On one occasion, when the ring was in Amina's keeping, the rebellious spirit Sakhr took on Solomon's form and obtained the ring. He then seated himself on the throne and ruled for forty days, during which time the real king wandered about the country, poor and forlorn. On the fortieth day Sakhr dropped the ring into the sea; there it was swallowed by a fish, which was caught by a poor fisherman and given to Solomon for his supper. Solomon cut open the fish, found the ring, and returned to power. His forty days' exile had been sent in punishment for the idolatry practised in his house for forty days, although unknown to him, by one of his wives" </ref>
<ref>Baiḍawi, ii. 187; Ṭabri, "Annales," ed. De Goeje, i. 592 et seq.)."</ref>
<ref>Sean Anthony, The Caliph and the Heretic: Ibn Saba' and the Origins of Shi`ism, 2011, p. 220.</ref>