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Megiddo: The History of the Famous Archaeological Site and Prophesized Battle of Armageddon PDF

53 Pages·2016·2.07 MB·English
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Megiddo: The History of the Famous Archaeological Site and Prophesized Battle of Armageddon By Charles River Editors Hanay’s picture of some of the ruins of Tel Megiddo About Charles River Editors Charles River Editors provides superior editing and original writing services across the digital publishing industry, with the expertise to create digital content for publishers across a vast range of subject matter. In addition to providing original digital content for third party publishers, we also republish civilization’s greatest literary works, bringing them to new generations of readers via ebooks. Sign up here to receive updates about free books as we publish them, and visit Our Kindle Author Page to browse today’s free promotions and our most recently published Kindle titles. Introduction Hanay’s picture of some of the ruins of Tel Megiddo Tel Megiddo There are not many corners in the world that have seen as many people, civilizations, and armies as Tel Megiddo. Located in the western Jezreel Valley, it once laid upon the Via Maris, an ancient international trade route that connected ancient Egypt to the kingdoms and empires of Palestine, Syria, Anatolia, and Mesopotamia. It is because of this road that Megiddo saw so much carnage and bloodshed throughout its history.[1] Many groups have coveted Tel Megiddo because of its strategic location guarding the entrance/exit of the Aruna Pass, now known as the Musmus Pass. Such groups ranged from the Canaanites, Egyptian, Israelites, Philistines and many others; including more recent states and empires, like the Ottomans, Napoleon’s French empire, and modern Israel. Megiddo’s occupational history, or ages of intensive human occupation, began during the Neolithic Age (c. late-fifth millennium B.C.E.) and ended in the Iron Age (c. late-seventh century B.C.E.). But, according to the New Testament, everyone’s stories will end with the coming of Armageddon, otherwise known as Tel Megiddo. The history of the archaeological site and the Jezreel Valley is filled with many firsts and many lasts. Perhaps its wide plains were the location of the first recorded battle. It most certainly was the location of the first recorded chariot battle in history when the Pharaoh of Egypt, Thutmosis III of the Eighteenth Dynasty, attacked his former vassals, the Canaanites, after their kings formed a coalition with the Mesopotamian kings during the 15th century B.C.E. Such occurrences of violence and warfare have been common ordeals in the Jezreel Valley, and depending on who partook varied from guerilla-warfare to open-air fighting. The history in the Jezreel Valley had been so repetitively violent that the British General Edmund Allenby replicated, almost exactly, the tactic used by Thutmosis III nearly 3400 years before him when he too attacked Megiddo in 1918. It is perhaps due to the many battles that the ancient scribes bestowed the image of Armageddon upon Megiddo. After all, the Hebrew words Har Megiddo, simply means the “Mount of Megiddo.”[2] But despite the bloody history of the mound, and its valley, Megiddo’s location was eventually lost to history and only was rediscovered relatively recently. Megiddo: The History of the Famous Archaeological Site and Prophesized Battle of Armageddon looks at the history of the site, its ruins, and its importance throughout the centuries. Along with pictures of important people, places, and events, you will learn about Megiddo like never before, in no time at all. Megiddo: The History of the Famous Archaeological Site and Prophesized Battle of Armageddon About Charles River Editors Introduction Tel Megiddo’s Chronological Sequence Geography Egyptian Presence and Sources The Archaeological Perspective of Megiddo The Iron Age Judgment Day and Its Possible Origins Online Resources Bibliography Tel Megiddo’s Chronological Sequence Strata Dates B.C.E. Periods Periods and Events XX Neolithic/Chalcolithic Remains on site XIX c. 3300 – Early Bronze Ib Earliest Temple 3000 XVIII Great Temple c. 3000 – Early Bronze II Gap in 2700 occupation? XVI c. 2700 – Early Bronze III Round Altar 2500 XV c. 2500 – Early Bronze III- Three Megaron 2000 Intermediate Bronze Temples XIV Intermediate Bronze Poor Settlement XIII – X c. 2000 – Middle Bronze II Renewed urban 1550 settlement; Lower Mound; massive fortifications IX – VIIA c. 1550 – Late Bronze Canaanite city 1130 state c. 1475 Campaign of Thutmosis III VIII 14th Century El-Amarna period c. 1175 Battle between Ramesses III and the Sea Peoples End of VIIA c. 1130 End of Late Bronze Destruction of city and end of Egyptian hegemony VIB – VIA c. 1130 – 950 Iron I City in Canaanite tradition End of VIA c. 950 Destruction of Stratum VIA VB c. 950 – 900 Iron IIA First Israelite settlement c. 925 Campaign of Shishak VA – IVB c. 900 – 800 Administrative city; palaces IVA c. 800 – 732 Iron IIB Fortified city; stables 732 Assyrian conquest III c. 732 – 650 Assyrian district centre II – I c. 650 – 350 Post-Assyrian and Persian settlement * Dates are not exact and may vary.[3] Geography It is easiest to conceptualize the location of Megiddo sitting on the northern side of the Carmel Mountain acting like a gate of the Via Maris. Through this gate once moved inconceivable amounts of international trade and people from the Mediterranean Coast to the Jezreel Valley via the Aruna/Musmus Pass. The mountain range of the Carmel formed a formidable natural boundary, which stretches from near modern Haifa in the northwest to Mount Gilboa in the southeast. At this point another mountain range and the Wadi Arabah box in the southern Levant as they stretch south down the spine of Judah and onto the deserts of the Negev, Transjordan, and northern Arabia. As a result of such rough environmental conditions surrounding the Fertile Crescent and the once malaria infested marshes and sand dunes of the Mediterranean coast, the Via Maris meandered into western Palestine then turned east across Mount Carmel, thus avoiding the Haifa Peninsula. In order to cross the mountain range there are three passageways. These passages issue into either the broad expanse of the Jezreel Valley, which then connects to the Beq’a Valley, and Syria in the east, or the Plain of Akko, and connects with Phoenicia. The southernmost pass meanders through the Dothan Valley before emerging upon the Jezreel Valley, to the east of the ancient city of Tanaach. The northernmost pass winds around Megiddo and emerges near the ancient city of Yoqneam, to the west. While the Tanaach pass is the longest and least efficient passageway, it has the easiest entrance into the valley. The Yoqneam passageway on the other hand is considered the most physically arduous. In contrast to these two, the route through the slender Wadi ‘Ara (Aruna/Musmus Pass) emerges upon the well-watered slopes of Megiddo after a relatively gentle incline. The Modern Jezreel Valley, photo by Joe Freeman For most of Megiddo’s early history the surrounding environmental conditions were quite favorable, but were achieved through human intervention such as draining swamplands and irrigation. In times of social decay, or occupational gaps the swamps returned, which mainly occurred during the Byzantine Age until the establishment of modern cities like Haifa. Natural springs and perennial streams ran along the western fringe of the Jezreel Valley and were a prime source of water for irrigation. Throughout antiquity, the lowland stretching northward from Megiddo consisted of broad flood plains and other meandering streams. The main sources for consumption though came from two springs that can be located at the base of Megiddo. All of this helps to explain why settlement at, and around the site, began in the Neolithic Age and continued into the Bronze and Iron Ages without significant interruption until the Byzantine Age.

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Overview: There are not many corners in the world that have seen as many people, civilizations, and armies as Tel Megiddo. Located in the western Jezreel Valley, it once laid upon the Via Maris, an ancient international trade route that connected ancient Egypt to the kingdoms and empires of Palestin
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