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Search results for: syrian? in all categories

312 results found.

32 pages of results.
81. The Excavation Of Ebla [Journals] [Kronos]
... conducted by a team of Italian archeologists of the University of Rome headed by Dr. Paolo Matthiae, 36, Professor of Archeology and of the history of the Ancient Near East, and Dr. Giovanni Pettinato, 41, a language expert and Professor of Assyriology. The team is working under the direction of Afif Bahnassi, Director General of Syrian Antiquities. 2) The initial excavations began in 1964 and the chief find, made in September 1975, consists of some 15,000 clay tablets found thirteen feet below ground level in two rooms off the courtyard of a palace of which only a small part has been excavated. The tablets, largely undamaged, have since been packed ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 15  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/kronos/vol0202/107discv.htm
... ," as he wrote me, he worked on his Stratigraphie comparée, which was published by the Oxford University Press in 1948. It all started with his visit to Troy, where Professor Carl Blegen of Cincinnati University was digging. Troy was repeatedly destroyed by natural causes at the very same times that Ugarit (Ras Shamra) on the Syrian coast, more than 500 miles away, was laid waste, also in natural crises. Schaeffer studied the excavated places and the reports of their archaeologists all over the lands of the ancient East, from Persia to the Caucasus to Egypt, and in each place found vestiges of synchronical catastrophes. Schaeffer described the different archaeological findings: Troy ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 15  -  05 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/stargazers/319-master.htm
83. Assyrians, Sodom, and Red Herrings [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... Heinsohn found with his Chaldeans and Sumerians, we have on one hand a history without an archaeology, and on the other, an archaeology without a history. The solution appears clear: Ebla (which can be a form of Eber, or Hebrew) was Samaria. (One further irony can be added. In July 1987 the first Syrian cosmonaut was launched into space as part of the Soviet space program. He carried with him an Ebla alphabet, supposedly from ancient Syria. In fact, it was a Hebrew text he had taken into orbit.) Let's return to Cardona's original point. He is wrong, and Vaninger is right, for the simplest of reasons. ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 14  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/cat-anc/vol1001/50sodom.htm
84. Editorial [Journals] [SIS Review]
... the conventional scheme there is no mention of any campaigning in Palestine during the reign of Osorkon I. Later, in the days of Elijah and Elisha, there are hints of a lingering Egyptian presence in Palestine, such as the Egyptian name of Amon, governor of Samaria (II Chron. 18:25), the fear of the Syrians besieging that city that "the kings of Egypt" were liable to descend on them (II Kings 7:6 ), and the participation of Egyptian troops in a battle as far north as Karkar in 853 BC. Was this the time of the Libyan rulers Osorkon II and Takeloth II, who did not rule or campaign in ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 14  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v0203/53exods.htm
85. Dating the Wars of Seti I [Journals] [SIS Review]
... the adjacent wall. The top register to the east of the doorway is now unfortunately destroyed, as is a portion of its counterpart on the western side, though here a section showing the capture of "the town of Kadesh" survives. It has been reasonably suggested that the missing eastern register showed the conquest of sea-ports on the North Syrian coast, since two of these towns Zimyra and Ullaza, are included in a list of conquered places on a sphinx in Seti's funerary temple at Kurna (30). The middle register to the east of the doorway shows the capture of a town called Yanoam, and the submission of the princes of Lebanon; that to the west ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 14  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v0501/13wars.htm
... has been built, the horizon has always been very carefully left open; there has always been a possibility of vision along the collimating axis prolonged. Lines of sphinxes have been broken to ensure this; [1 ] at Medînet-Habû, on the opposite side of the river to Karnak, we have outside this great temple a model of a Syrian fort. If we prolong the line of the temple from the middle of the Naos through the systems of pylons, we find that in the model of the fort an opening was left, so that the vision from the sanctuary of the temple was left absolutely free to command the horizon. It may be said that that cannot be ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 14  -  25 Mar 2001  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/dawn/dawn16.htm
87. The Ruins Of The East. Ch.12 The Ruins Of The East (Earth In Upheaval) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Earth in Upheaval]
... " of the Middle Bronze and those of the Late Bronze, a layer of earth five feet thick was found without a sign of habitation-a "hiatus." At Alaca Huyuk the transition from Middle Bronze to Late Bronze was marked by upheaval and destruction, and the same may be said of every excavated site in Asia Minor. On the Syrian coast and in the interior "we find a stratigraphic and chronological rupture between the strata of the Middle Bronze and Late Bronze at Qalaat-er-Rouss, Tell Simiriyan, Byblos, and in the necropoles of Kafer-Djarra, Qrayé, Majdalouna." All the necropoles examined in the upper valley of the Orontes ceased to be used, and habitation of the ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 14  -  03 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/earth/12c-ruins.htm
... thought to have happened after the Assyrian campaigns of Adad Nirari III. He effectively defeated and annexed Aram Damascus. However, a climatic glitch at this time might have subsided, arid conditions replaced by wetter weather favouring reinvigorated agriculture. At the same time, higher precipitation may underlie an apparent quiescent Aramean population, as pasturage was available on the Syrian steppe zone. Jeroboam II, his immediate successors and, later, Ahaz and Manasseh, were reviled by the Deut. historiographer as apostates - yet they were all vassals of Assyria during what were probably relatively prosperous periods. The Yahwists, it seems, especially disliked the Assyrian connection. This tends to fuel the idea that they were ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 14  -  26 Mar 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v2002n2/28poss.htm
... g. Why the small g, one wonders? In i Sam. xxx, 15 the "young man of Egypt" says to David : "Swear unto me by the Elohim that thou wilt not kill me." Here the English is " God." Again one wonders why the singular, and the big G? The Syrians said "Jehovah is an Eloah of the hills, but he is not an Eloah of the valleys" (i Kings xx, 28). Here again we have "god" with a small g. King Abimelech remarks to Abraham (Gen. xxi, 23) that the Elohim are with him, Abraham, in all ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 14  -  29 Sep 2002  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/night/vol-1/night-03.htm
90. Assuruballit and his Time [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... letters could have come from this period. 3. Mr James also reviewed the solutions proposed by Courville and Velikovsky. Again, both appear quite unacceptable for the reasons Mr James has stated. In addition, the Courville solution would seem to require the acceptance of Assur-nadin-ahe as Shalmaneser III. Later Courville has also pointed to the possibility of a Syrian ruler.(3 ) 4. We are therefore left with the possibility, in the absence of other alternatives, that Assuruballit may have been Shalmaneser III, but as Mr James notes, this is unsubstantiated. In looking at "the wider picture", Assyrian chronology would appear to be sufficiently settled so as to preclude the possibility ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 14  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/workshop/vol0401/04time.htm
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