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Minggu, 17 Januari 2010

megiddo map

Be hurry be very very very hurry to help people to find megiddo location at Israel:

'in the Septuagint; Latin: Mageddo; Assyrian: Magiddu, Magaddu; Magidda and Makida in the Amarna tablets; Egyptian: Maketi, Makitu, and Makedo[1]) is a hill in modern Israel near the Kibbutz of Megiddo, known for its historical, geographical, and theological importance.

In ancient times Megiddo was an important city-state. It is also known alternatively as Tel Megiddo (Hebrew) and Tell al-Mutesellim (Arabic). Megiddo is a tel (hill or mound) made of 26 layers of the ruins of ancient cities in a strategic location at the head of a pass through the Carmel Ridge, which overlooks the Valley of Jezreel from the west. The name Armageddon mentioned in the New Testament derives from Har Megiddo (Hebrew) meaning Mount of Megiddo'.

source: http://www.answers.com/topic/tel-megiddo


The city of Hazor has been identified at the huge mound of Tell Hazor 9 miles (14 km) north of the Sea of Galilee. The ancient site comprises an elevated mound extending over an area of 30 acres (12.5 ha), and a lower city 175 acres (73 ha) large, 3,000 feet (910 m) long and 2,100 feet (640 m) wide. The earliest settlement at the Lower City is from the mid-18th century B.C. This large area was encompassed by an earthen rampart, by which it was fortified. In order to study this enormous area, the site was excavated in nine different sections. In some of these, sacred compounds were uncovered including a temple built in the 17th-16th centuries B.C. In the 15th century B.C. the floor of the temple was raised; the courtyard at its front was surrounded by a wall and adjoined by another paved court containing a high place, in whose vicinity cult objects and bones from animal sacrifices have been found.
source: http://www.answers.com/topic/hazor

The first campaign, in which the city of Megiddo, the focal point of Asiatic resistance in Palestine, was captured, is related in considerable detail. Although records of subsequent campaigns may have been equally fully recorded, the details in the texts have been greatly condensed, and the accounts show more interest in the booty or tribute acquired. They do, however, shed occasional light on the conduct of the operations and the policy adopted by Thutmose in administering the subjugated territories. Of particular interest is his practice not only of installing rulers on whose loyalty he could depend, but also of ensuring their continued loyalty by taking to Egypt as hostages their children or brothers.

In addition to the "Annals" at Karnak, references to Thutmose's Asiatic campaigns also occur in the texts of steles from Armant in Upper Egypt and Jebel Barkal near the Fourth Cataract, as well as in the autobiography of a military officer named Amenemhab, which is painted on the walls of his tomb (No. 85) at Thebes.

Among Thutmose's numerous building enterprises may be mentioned the Festival Hall at Karnak and the Seventh Pylon there. His funerary temple built on the edge of the western desert at Thebes is almost completely destroyed. Like his predecessors, he had a large tomb excavated for himself in the Valley of the Kings.
source: http://www.answers.com/topic/thutmose-iii

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