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Search results for: syrian in all categories

312 results found.

32 pages of results.
161. Metallurgy and Chronology [Journals] [Pensee]
... . And in fact there is "a long list of mentions of iron in these documents, which reach down to the end of the Hittite Empire about -1200 . . . Here iron is the common metal, not the bronze to which one is accustomed in other lands of the Near East" (18). The Phoenicians of the Syrian shore, because of their closeness to Cyprus with its rich copper mines, were not fond of ironwork, though iron, too, was occasionally worked there in small quantities. It is no wonder that most of the metal found in Ras Shamra across the strait from Cyprus was bronze; yet rusted iron objects were found in Ras Shamra ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/pensee/ivr05/05metal.htm
... from supposedly the 9th and 8th centuries, are actually indistinguishable from the Hittite Empire settlements, supposedly of the 15th and 14th centuries. Even worse (and this was fully admitted by Peter James in his Chronological Problems in the Archaeology of the Hittites', SIS Review VI: 1-3 – The Glasgow Proceedings, April 1978), although the Syrian cities were incorporated into the Hittite cultural sphere during the time of the Hittite Empire (by Suppiluliumas in fact), not a single Syrian city can show an Imperial Hittite stratum underlying the Neo-Hittite stratum. If Imperial Hittite remains are found (e .g . those bearing the name of a Hittite Great King), these are invariably ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  13 Apr 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v2004n3/16dark.htm
... 16). The latest burial in the Tel Gedor tomb would then probably be that of Jeroham. A fragmentary bronze bowl found in south-east Cyprus names a Hiram, king of the Sidonians', whose usual identification as Hiram II (c . 738) appears epigraphically indefensible (cf. J.C .L . Gibson: Textbook of Syrian Semitic Inscriptions 3 (1982), pp. 31 and 67). With a c. 200-250 year downdating, 12th-11th century' features of this bowl's script and related scripts would point instead to Solomon's ally, Hiram I (who is generally thought - e.g . H.J . Katzenstein: The History of Tyre ( ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/workshop/w1995no2/10david.htm
... party (" --Treaty-when the king of the land of Egypt- and when with- the king of the land of Egypt"), and though the lines are mutilated, it is evident that an alliance was concluded by the king of Assyria with the king of Egypt against Mursilis. Also, at the approach of the king of Egypt, some Syrian potentates swung to the side of Mursilis' enemies. As soon as tidings were brought about the arrival of the Egyptian troops, 1 moved against them. Mursilis wrote to the garrison in Carchemish that if the Egyptian army entered Nuhasse (in Syria) he should be informed immediately. . . . and I shall come and battle against ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  05 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/ramses/4-forgotten.htm
165. Letters [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... of Kasse' (Chaldean Babylon) and I believe that Abdi-Ashirta did graduate to being a king of Mitanni' and also became the king of Kasse'. On close study of the kingdom of Mitanni, whose king Tushratta, or Dushratta, was an el-Amarna correspondent with Amenhotep III and Akhenaten, one finds that it basically approximates to the Syrian kingdom, but reaching also into Assyria, and perhaps Anatolia. One might, therefore, expect to read about a huge clash between the Syrian king Abdi-Ashirta (also a contemporary of these two pharaohs) and Tushratta. One doesn't. Why? Abdi-Ashirta, (var. Abdi-Ashrati, meaning slave of Ashtarte' can be seen as Ab-DU-aSHRATTA ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  26 May 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/workshop/w2005no3/03letters.htm
166. Were The Hitites Lydians? [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... the Babylonian monarch of aggression against Assyrian territory.19 We are informed by Herodotus that it was the Lydians who started the war. Croesus, he says, crossed the Halys River (close to Hattusal) and, "came to a place called Pteria, in Cappadocia .. . Here he encamped, and ravaged the lands of the Syrians; and took the city of the Pterians, and enslaved the inhabitants; he also took all the adjacent places, and expelled the inhabitants, who had given him no cause for blame."20 In like manner, it would appear that it was Tudhaliyas the Hittite who initiated hostilities against the king of Assyria. In a treaty ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  27 May 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/velikov/vol0501/02hitites.pdf
167. Abraham to Hezekiah: An Archaeological Revision Part I [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... MBI rather than an intrusive culture due to population movement.(29) Tubb has recently given an impressive critique of the theory that MBIIA cultural developments are due to the arrival of a new populace (such as a second wave of Amorites). He has shown that it is impossible to prove that the MBIIA culture of Palestine and the Syrian coast originated in the Syrian inland, as demonstrated by the Amorite hypothesis: Since it cannot be demonstrated that there is a connection between the painted pottery of Palestine and that of central inland Syria, the argument that seeks an origin for the Palestinian MBIIA culture in the latter region is seriously weakened. . . . The preceding discussion makes ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/cat-anc/vol0502/069abr.htm
... laden with gold and various spices and precious stones"; the resplendent pilgrims to the city of wisdom were escorted by the royal guard. The queen and her train, including her royal artist, were obviously impressed by the handsome appearance of the Israelite warriors. What did the ancient Israelites look like? We have been accustomed to seeing the Syrian prisoners sculptured by the Egyptian craftsmen of later kings of the Eighteenth Dynasty, and also of the Ninteenth and Twentieth Dynasties. The beards of the captives are round and untrimmed, "socratic", the figures helpless; for the most part they are portrayed at the moment of their execution. But here on the Punt reliefs the appearance ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  01 Apr 2001  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/ages/chap-3.htm
... 62) and the psyche (compare the goddess Psyche) was depicted on Greek vases as a bird. In Gypsy legends, the souls of women turn into doves.(63) In Christian myth the souls of saints become doves,(64) and the dove is also the symbol of the Holy Ghost.(65) The Syrian goddess Semiramis was changed into a dove,(66) while the Queen of Sheba was the "radiant white dove."(67) In Roman iconography the soul appears as a dove, and the Latin ayes meant both "birds" and "ancestral spirits." Among the Japanese, "There was evidendy a belief that ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  30 Jul 2008  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/aeon/vol0204/029myth.htm
170. The Hyksos (Ages in Chaos) [Velikovsky]
... to the correct ones. So it happens that Joseph was sold into Egypt when an Amalekite was the pharaoh, or that Moses left Egypt when an Amalekite was the pharaoh. An Arab author admitted that there was no concurrence as to the race of the pharaoh who reigned at the time of Moses, whether he was a Copt, a Syrian, or an Amalekite.21 We shall disregard these attempts of some Arabian authors to insert stories culled from the biblical narrative into stories indigenous to the Arabian peninsula, and we shall devote our attention only to the narratives which did not have their source in the Bible or the Haggada. They must have been autochthonous and transmitted from generation ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 10  -  01 Apr 2001  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/ages/chap-2.htm
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