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62 pages of results. 211. Biblical Pentapolis or Midianite Cities? [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... that, during the Maccabean wars, Alexander Janneus captured a city called Zoar which he then promised to the Nabatean king Aretas IV.[32] All of which might explain why the locality of Zoar was never lost and how this one city, out of the five, found its way onto the much later Medeba (or Madaba) map. Thus, admittedly, if the discovered sites in question are truly those of the Cities of the Plain, the one at Safi, which the Medeba map identifies as Zoar,[33] should have its destruction dated much later than EB III. Whether this turns out to be the case or not, and what further arguments ...
212. An Eighth-Century Date for Merenptah [Journals] [SIS Review]
... since, as we have noted, Tiglath-pileser III sacked Gaza in 734 BC. 20. Cf. Tadmor, op. cit., p. 89. 21. Ibid., note 15. 22. Cf. Yeivin, op. cit., p. 30, note 24 and p. 85, note 128; the map on p. 29 locates it just west of the southern tip of the Sea of Galilee, which location is followed on the map given with the present article. 23. Cf. Tadmor op. cit., p. 89. 24. It is tempting to speculate that the Janoah (Yanoah) mentioned in this verse is ...
213. Planets in the Bible: I -- The Cosmology of Job [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Stecchini, loc. cit. (Comments Stecchini: "The reader can easily grasp what was meant by maet' by referring to what I have said about the geodetic system of Egypt. But, having admitted what is indisputable, . . . Aldred stops cold and does not draw the implications.") 14. Hapgood (in Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings, New York, 1966) showed that the information contained on a series of portolan maps, widely used by mariners in the Middle Ages, could only have been compiled by a culture which could accurately measure longitude - and hence must have had a transoceanic navigational capability and an awareness of the earth as a ...
214. Jupiter - God of Abraham (Part III) [Journals] [Kronos]
... spring; that all five date to the same archaeological period - the Early Bronze Age; and that there is no other evidence of occupation in the area until the Roman period over 2000 years later is not without significance."(223) What is of high interest is the fact that the town of Safi is indicated on a mosaic map which was found in the ruins of a Byzantine church at Medeba (or Madaba), some thirty miles north of Bab edh-Dhra'. Believed to have been constructed in "about A.D . 560", and labelled in Greek, (224) this map identifies Safi as Zoar(225) - the only city of ...
215. Aeon Volume V, Number 4: Contents [Journals] [Aeon]
... News Reporter: Tania ta Maria Volume V, Number 4 ISSN 1066-5145 Copyright (c ) July 1999 IN THIS ISSUE.Front Cover Professor Gunnar Heinsohn (photograph by Dwardu Cardona). Editorial By Dwardu Cardona Vox Popvli Our readers sound off. PAGE 5 Forvm Debates concerning polar shifts, pterodactyls & gravity, the Mosaic calendar, and ancient maps. Back to Instantaneous Polar Shifts (David Salkeld & Flavio Barbiero) Gravity and Pterodactyls (Mike Twose & Frederic Jueneman) The Mosaic Calendar (Lisa Liel, Eric Aitchison & Dale Murphey) Imaginary Worlds (Richard M. Smith & Sean Mewhinney) Numerical Analysis of Planetary Distances in a Polar Model- by Emilio Spedicato Professor Spedicato offers ...
216. ISIS Fellowship Lecture [Journals] [SIS Review]
... c.1450 with Thutmose III, when the Egyptians set up their empire in the Levant. An introductory lecture was given by George Hart of the British Museum (and ISIS), reviewing links between Egypt and Palestine from early times until Thutmose III. Then Bietak gave his first talk, outlining the finds of the excavations. A reconstructed map of the area was shown wherein Avaris/Daba was an island between branches of the Nile. The old river courses, long since dried up, had been traced by a series of 800 bore holes. The Hyksos town was probably about 2.5 sq. km. in area - very large for its time. After the ...
217. Aeon Volume VI, Number 1: Contents [Journals] [Aeon]
... . Front Cover Kometes- symbolizing the primordial cometary Venus in relation to the Saturnian configuration- painting (oil on canvas) by Talitha Acheson. Editorial By Ev Cochrane Vox Popvli Our readers sound off. Page 5 Apologies from Down Under Day Star Questioned Redesigning Einstein Inverting the Bat Creek Stone Forvm Debates concerning gravity, pterodactyls, and ancient sea maps. Page 7 Pole Shifts Through Impacts: The Debate Goes on by Victor Slabinski, Falvio Barbiero and Dwardu Cardona The Paleo-Saturnian System by Michael Bar-Ron and Dwardu Cardona Proposed Variations on the Saturnian Configuration by Tonny van Rhee and Dwardu Cardona Extra-Solar Planets: An Update by Dwardu Cardona The newest discoveries of planets orbiting stars other than our Sun, ...
218. Aeon Volume V, Number 5: Contents [Journals] [Aeon]
... ISSN 1066-5145 Copyright (c ) January 2000 IN THIS ISSUE.Front Cover The alignment of planets in the Saturnian configuration as seen from Earth. (Computer simulation by Jeff Trom at Engineering Animation Inc., Ames, Iowa.) Editorial By Dwardu Cardona Vox Popvli Our readers sound off. PAGE 5 Forvm Debates concerning polar shifts and ancient maps. Instantaneous Polar Shifts (Tim Thompson & Flavio Barbiero) Imaginary Worlds: The Debate Heats Up (Alasdair Beal, Charles Ginenthal & Sean Mewhinney) Stellar Spectra- by Earl R. Milton In which the late author illustrates that the spectra of stars conform much better with the electric universe model than they do with the currently accepted one ...
219. Sky Dragons and Celestial Serpents by Alastair McBeath (Book Review). C&C Review 2002:1 [Journals] [SIS Review]
... and again in emails to Benny Peiser's CCNET forum. The first five chapters of the booklet concern those constellations likened to dragons, namely Draco, Cetus, Hydra, Serpens and Hydrus. In the Introduction he gives a good overview of astronomy and the stars and makes the point that the most important part of the zodiac is the imaginary line mapped out by the apparent annual motion of the Sun through the sky, the ecliptic'. This is in effect a projection of the Earth's own orbit around the Sun on to the constellations, so the Earth is never actually off the ecliptic - and neither is the Sun because that is what the Earth orbits. He goes on in ...
220. Review: <i>Essays on the Patriarchal Narratives</i> by A.R. Millard and D. J. Wiseman, Eds [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... Thompson's The Historicity of the Patriarchal Narratives (1974). Their studies were highly critical of Biblical traditions, but for essentially different reasons. The Essays for all intents and purposes succeeds in correcting the problem. Within its pages are found not only discussions of old theories and approaches to the question of Abraham, but also fresh directions, well mapped out. Of the seven contributions to the work we will examine three here. D. J. Wiseman has produced a fine piece, "Abraham Reassessed." This is for the most part derived from a series of articles he developed in Bibliotheca Sacra (April-June 1977 and following). Here he deals with Abraham as a Hebrew ...
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