findspot, place of finding
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 Hammam — by A. Hausleiter — last modified Jan 11, 2024 05:16 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 93 B2 Tell Hammam
- Tell Laham — by A. Hausleiter — last modified Jan 11, 2024 05:32 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 93 B1 Tell Laham
- Tell Taban/[Tabite]/Thebet(h)a? — by M. Roaf — last modified Jan 04, 2024 11:54 AM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 89 C4 Tell Taban/[Tabite]/Thebet(h)a?
- Tha'anach — by E.M. Meyers — last modified Jan 09, 2024 10:40 PM
- Tell site at the northern edge of the Nablus Range inhabited from the Iron Age to the present.
- Thaima — by D.F. Graf — last modified Jan 21, 2024 09:54 AM
- Thaima or Tayma is an oasis with a long history of human settlement.
- Theatrum Pompei — by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Oct 06, 2024 04:20 PM
- Rome's first permanent theater, located in the Campus Martius. The complex was completed under the second consulship of Pompeius Magnus in 55 B.C.
- Thebai/Thebae — by J. Fossey — last modified Feb 29, 2024 09:42 PM
- The ancient city of Thebes in Boeotia (modern Greece).
- Touphion — by T. Wilfong — last modified Jan 12, 2024 10:11 AM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 80 B2 Touphion
- Tulul Abu Adhem — by M. Roaf — last modified Jan 04, 2024 11:36 AM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 91 G5 Tulul Abu Adhem
- Tulul Khattab — by M. Roaf — last modified Jan 11, 2024 05:22 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 91 F4 Tulul Khattab
- Tyrus/Col. Septimia Severa — by E.M. Meyers — last modified Sep 26, 2024 03:24 PM
- The ancient city of Tyre (modern es-Sur on the coast of Lebanon). A UNESCO World Heritage Site, in part because of its "important archaeological remains, mainly from Roman times."
- Uruk/Orchoe/Erech/Orikut — by A. Hausleiter — last modified Sep 13, 2024 04:38 PM
- Uruk was an ancient Sumerian (and later Babylonian) city located on the Euphrates river. At its height (ca. 2900 BC), Uruk's population may have topped 50,000 people and its walls enclosed an area of more than six square kilometers, making it the largest city in the world at that point in time.
- Veh Ardashir/Coche/Mahoza/‘Seleucia’ — by M. Roaf — last modified Sep 20, 2024 12:33 PM
- A significant Hellenistic city that served as a capital of both the Seleucid and Parthian empires. The city was founded by Seleucus Nicator.