Hellenistic, Roman Republic (330 BC-30 BC)
Creators:
Sean Gillies
Copyright © The Creators. Sharing and remixing permitted under terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (cc-by).
Last modified
Sep 09, 2009 09:46 AM
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- Tell Ashamsani — by M. Roaf — last modified Oct 20, 2012 08:02 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 91 B2 Tell Ashamsani
- Tell Aswad — by M. Roaf — last modified Oct 20, 2012 08:03 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 91 F4 Tell Aswad
- Tell Babil — by M. Roaf — last modified Jan 22, 2021 09:25 AM
- The so-called "Summer Palace of Nebuchadnezzar," located at ancient Babylon in modern Iraq.
- Tell Baradan — by M. Roaf — last modified Sep 18, 2023 01:22 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 91 G3 Tell Baradan
- Tell Barri/[Kahat] — by M. Roaf — last modified Nov 11, 2024 08:20 AM
- Tell Barri/[Kahat] is an archaeological site located along the Wadi Jaghjagh, a tributary of the Khabur River, in north-eastern Syria's Al-Hasakah Governorate. The ancient name of the site was Kahat. The site is occupied from the later Halaf period (late seventh to early sixth millennium BCE) to the Iron Age (first millennium BCE). The tell is substantial - at least 32 meters in height, covering an area of 37 hectares - and was accompanied by a lower town of some 7 hectares.
- Tell Beidar — by M. Roaf — last modified Aug 22, 2013 09:41 AM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 89 C4 Tell Beidar
- Tell Bezari — by M. Roaf — last modified Jan 29, 2021 11:38 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 89 C4 Tell Bezari
- Tell Bismaya — by M. Roaf — last modified Nov 19, 2018 07:09 AM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 91 G5 Tell Bismaya
- Tell Deinit — by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Mar 07, 2023 02:54 PM
- Settlement in western Syria inhabited from the 3rd Millennium BCE through the Byzantine period.
- Tell Dhahab — by M. Roaf — last modified Jan 10, 2024 02:21 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 91 F4 Tell Dhahab
- Tell el Firr — by J.P. Brown — last modified Oct 20, 2012 04:11 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 69 B4 Tell el Firr
- Tell el-ʻAbd — by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Aug 05, 2019 04:45 PM
- Mound site along the eastern bank of the Euphrates in northern Syria. The site shows signs of habitation from the Early Bronze Age through the Byzantine period. Tell el-ʻAbd was flooded by the construction of the Taqba Dam in 1975, though a portion of it has reemerged due to declining water levels in Lake Assad.
- Tell el-Heir — by A. Bernand — last modified Jul 12, 2023 06:08 PM
- An ancient site in the Sinai that was the location of a series of successive fortresses from the Persian through the Roman periods. It may be identifiable with the Greek name Magdolos and/or the Hebrew name Migdol. There is also some speculation that much earlier textual evidence for a fortification of Ramses III should be tied to this site as well.
- Tell el-Hesi — by Gabriel Mckee — last modified May 06, 2023 05:42 PM
- Archaeological site located in southern Palestine with signs of habitation (with gaps) from the late Neolithic through the Hellenistic period, as well as burials from Late Antiquity.
- Tell el-Ma'araka — by R. Müller Wollermann — last modified Dec 27, 2021 05:29 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 75 D2 Tell el-Ma'araka
- Tell el-Mazar — by Zachary Rosalinsky — last modified May 31, 2022 03:41 PM
- A small but tall settlement mound located in the Jordan Valley with archaeological remains from the 8th-4th centuries BCE.
- Tell el-Moqdam — by A. Bernand — last modified May 20, 2022 07:14 PM
- An ancient settlement in Egypt, known as Leontopolis (one of two in the area) in Greco-Roman sources.
- Tell el-Yahudiya — by A. Bernand — last modified May 20, 2022 07:17 PM
- An ancient settlement in Egypt, known as Leontopolis (one of two in the area) in Greco-Roman sources.
- Tell en-Nasbeh — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Jun 16, 2023 11:48 AM
- Tell en-Naṣbeh is an archaeological site ca. 12 km north of the Old City of Jerusalem. The site is often identified with the biblical Mizpah in Benjamin.
- Tell es-Sweyhat — by Zachary Rosalinsky — last modified Jun 10, 2022 06:51 AM
- Tell es-Sweyhat or Sweyhat refers to an ancient settlement mound or tell located along the Euphrates river in what is now the Raqqa Governorate of northern Syria. This human settlement was occupied from the beginning of the third millennium BCE until its collapse in the early second millennium BCE. The site remained occupied during the Early Bronze-Middle Bronze age transition. There is later reoccupation of the site during the Hellenistic and late Roman periods.