A Wall Chart - Carta’s Millennium Maps of the Holyland portray the extent of territorial control of the Holy Land at the turn of four millennia:
Plan of the caves northwest of the Ein Gedi Field School
The Final Campaign of Nebuchadnezzar against Judah
Campaign by Mursili I destroys major Amurrite centers, including Babylon, mid-second millennium B.C.
Sennacherib in Philistia and Judah
The arena of Ashurnasirpal II
The conquests of John Hyrcanus in Idumea, 112 BCE
The miracle stories of crossing the Jordan and the conquest of Jericho are well known and elicit the most heated debate and the strongest emotions. The waters of the Jordan are said to have piled up at Adam, near Zarethan (Josh 3:15b–16), traditionally located at Tell ed-Dâmiyeh.
The Israelite conquest began in eastern Transjordan, beyond the borders of the Land of Canaan.In this sparsely settled region, there were extensive lands for pasturage (Num 32:1–4). Peoples related to the Israelites had already settled in the southern parts of Transjordan, soon forming organized kingdoms – Edom, Moab, and Ammon.
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