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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Nabataean Kingdom 11 found (187 total)
alternate case: nabataean Kingdom
Dumat al-Jandal
(2,033 words)
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Dumat al-Jandal (Arabic: دُومَة ٱلْجَنْدَل, romanized: Dūmat al-Jandal, lit. 'Dumah of the Stone', pronounced [ˈduːmat alˈdʒandal]), also known as Al-Jawf
Nabataean religion
(4,084 words)
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to be the daughters of the high god Allah. In some regions of the Nabataean kingdom , both Allat and Al-'Uzza are said to be the same goddess. It is very
Greece–Jordan relations
(274 words)
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the Seleucid Empire at the Battle of Cana in 84 BC. In AD 106, the Nabataean Kingdom was annexed by the Roman Empire and renamed to Arabia Petraea, which
Laïla Nehmé
(597 words)
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2007 – Prix Clio for Archaeological Research. Nehmé, L. (2016). "Nabataean Kingdom ". In MacKenzie, J.M. (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Empire. pp. 1–3. doi:10
Madaba
(1,606 words)
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Provincia Arabia set up by the Roman Emperor Trajan to replace the Nabataean kingdom of Petra. The first evidence for a Christian community in the city
Abjad
(1,865 words)
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Imperial Aramaic. Nabataean no no right-left 22 none Middle East Nabataean Kingdom Nabataean 200 BCE Aramaic Arabic Middle Persian, (Pahlavi) no no right-left
Auja al-Hafir
(1,501 words)
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Hasmonaean and Herodian Kingdoms, until AD 105 when Trajan annexed the Nabataean Kingdom . A large rectangular hill-top fort probably dates from the 4th century
Petra Theater
(290 words)
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The theater was built in the cultural and political apex of the Nabataean kingdom under Aretas IV (9 BC-40 AD), where large scale civic construction
Hauran
(9,177 words)
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largely nominal and the region became a contested area between the Nabataean Kingdom , the Jerusalem-based Hasmonean dynasty and the Iturean principality
History of Palestine
(40,284 words)
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important trade routes, continued to prosper. The incorporation of the Nabataean kingdom began a slow process of hellenization and after the fourth century
Pre-Islamic Arabian inscriptions
(2,555 words)
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and this has been linked to a flourishing Minaean trade. In the Nabataean kingdom , both Aramaic and Arabic were used as spoken languages. The Nabataean