| A | B |
| King of Israel who seems to have suffered from a mental illness | Saul |
| King of Israel who committed adultery and tried to cover his tracks by murdering his lover's husband | David |
| Persian ruler that allowed the Jews to return from exile to their ancestral homeland | Cyrus |
| Macedonian General who led the Greeks | Alexander |
| This structure found in a typical polis was used for musical performances | Odeon |
| King of Israel said to be the wisest | Solomon |
| This was main entrance to a polis, with elaborate gates, fortified walls, and secured buildings built right into the wall itself. | Propylaea |
| Language that the entire New Testament was written | Kione |
| Large open area at the heart of the polis | Agora |
| This structure found in a typical polis was used to hold public meetings. | Bouleuterion |
| Seleucid king that defiled the Temple of Jerusalem by sacrificing swine on the altar and by building an alter to the god Zeus | Antiochus IV |
| A structure found in a typical polis. It functioned as a training facility for competitors in public games. | Gymnasium |
| Epiphanes | God Made Visible |
| Refers to the blending of the blending of religious practices and deities. | Religious Syncretism |
| A structure found in a typical polis used for horse racing and chariot racing. | Hippodrome |
| A structure found in a typical polis used for foot races. | Stadia |
| This structure found in a typical polis became "something like a cross between an aquacentre and a theme park." | Bath |
| A structure found in a typical polis used as a ceremonial platform. | Bema |
| This structure found in a typical polis was used for traditional gladiatorial games | Amphitheater |
| These were covered walkways or porticoes found in a typical polis | Stoa |