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Salome (/səˈloʊmi, ˈsæləmeɪ/; Hebrew: שְלוֹמִית, romanized: Shlomit,
related to שָׁלוֹם,
Shalom "peace"; Gr****: Σαλώμη), also
known as
Salome III, was...
- and
Matthew 14:3–11).
Salome or
Salomé may also
refer to:
Salome Alexandra (139–67 BCE),
Queen regnant of
Judea (76–67 BCE)
Salome I (69 BCE–10 CE), Herod...
- Lou Andreas-
Salomé (born
either Louise von
Salomé or Luíza
Gustavovna Salomé or
Lioulia von
Salomé, Russian: Луиза Густавовна Саломе; 12
February 1861...
-
Salomé Villeneuve is a
Canadian film
director and screenwriter. She is most
noted for her
short film III,
which was a
Canadian Screen Award nominee for...
-
Salome Zourabichvili (/ˌsɑːloʊˈmeɪ ˌzʊrəbɪʃˈviːli/; born 18
March 1952) is a French-born
Georgian politician,
former diplomat and the
fifth president of...
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Salome (French:
Salomé,
pronounced [
salɔme]) is a one-act
tragedy by
Oscar Wilde. The
original version of the play was
first published in
French in 1893;...
-
Salome with the Head of John the
Baptist may
refer to:
Salome with the Head of John the
Baptist (Caravaggio, London)
Salome with the Head of John the...
- In the New Testament,
Salome was a
follower of
Jesus who
appears briefly in the
canonical gospels and in
apocryphal writings. She is
named by Mark as present...
-
Salome, Op. 54, is an
opera in one act by
Richard Strauss. The
libretto is
Hedwig Lachmann's
German translation of the 1891
French play
Salomé by Oscar...
-
Salome, also
known as
Salome II, was a
Herodian princess, the
daughter of
Herod the
Great (Herod I) and one of his
lesser wives, Elpis, born in ~14 BCE...