mountain
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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- Gallesion (mountain) — by C. Foss — last modified Oct 29, 2021 06:29 AM
- Alaman Dağ.
- Garizein (mountain) — by E.M. Meyers — last modified Oct 19, 2023 01:09 PM
- One of two mountains in the immediate vicinity of the West Bank city of Nablus.
- Gaura (mountain) — by E. Bertrand — last modified Mar 01, 2021 05:40 PM
- Col de Cabre.
- Gebel es-Silsilah — by Zachary Rosalinsky — last modified Sep 23, 2024 07:54 PM
- A mountain on the west bank of the Nile River some 40 miles north of Aswan with over 30 Eighteenth Dynasty shrines. This site was first settled in the late Predynastic period, was an important sandstone quarry in the Eighteenth Dynasty with some inhabitants, and was still used in the Roman period.
- Geronteon (mountain) — by G. Reger — last modified Nov 20, 2024 01:25 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 58 C2 Geronteon M.
- Graupius (mountain) — by A.S. Esmonde Cleary — last modified Mar 01, 2021 05:40 PM
- Site of Roman military victory over the native Caledonians in AD 83 or 84, chronicled in Tacitus' Agricola. Its location has never been conclusively identified, notwithstanding centuries of scholarly debate. Dozens of candidate sites have been proposed (and dismissed) over the years, however, the general consensus seems to agree upon a location somewhere in northeast Scotland extending north from Perthshire well into Aberdeenshire.
- Grion (mountain) — by C. Foss — last modified Mar 01, 2021 05:40 PM
- Ilbir Dağ.
- Haemus (mountain range) — by A.G. Poulter — last modified Oct 01, 2023 11:37 PM
- A mountain range of northern Thrace: the modern "Balkan Mountains".
- Hareni (mountain) — by Jr. — last modified Aug 31, 2022 10:52 AM
- Arenas Gordas.
- Hemodos/Imaus/Caucasus (mountains) — by M.U. Erdosy — last modified May 03, 2022 03:48 PM
- Although ancient, western commentators varied in their precision and ideas about location, they seem all to have meant by these names a single range or mountainous region corresponding to the modern notion of the Himalaya or at least the eastern portion of what we today consider the Hindu Kush, Pamir, and Himalaya ranges.
- Heniochi/Coraxici (mountain) — by David Braund — last modified Aug 18, 2023 09:28 PM
- The Heniochi were an ancient people and associated region, localized to the east of the Black Sea. Pliny calls the region a mountain range (Heiochi montes) and offers the alternate name Coaraxici.
- Heraia (mountain) — by R.J.A. Wilson — last modified Mar 30, 2024 10:51 PM
- Monti Erei.
- Herminius (mountain) — by E.W. Haley — last modified Jul 15, 2024 04:07 PM
- Herminius M. (the Serra da Estrela mountains of modern Portugal)
- Hieron Oros/Crania M. — by W.M. Murray — last modified Apr 01, 2023 11:05 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 54 D3 Hieron Oros/Crania M.
- Hieron/Arbion? M. — by J. Bennet — last modified Jun 23, 2021 01:09 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 60 D2 Hieron/Arbion? M.
- Hindu Kush (mountains) — by M.U. Erdosy — last modified Sep 26, 2024 06:21 PM
- The Hindu Kush mountain range, which extends through Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Tajikistan, was known to the Greeks and Romans as the Paropamisos or Caucasus mountains. They are not to be confused with the other Caucasus Mountains (greater and lesser) between the Black and Caspian Seas.
- Hippika? Ore — by David Braund — last modified Aug 31, 2022 01:50 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 85 A1 Hippika? Ore
- Hormina? M. — by G. Reger — last modified Jan 26, 2020 10:18 AM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 58 A2 Hormina? M.
- Hyblaei Colles — by R.J.A. Wilson — last modified Mar 26, 2024 11:39 PM
- An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 47 F4 Hyblaei Colles
- Hymettos M. — by J.S. Traill — last modified Feb 26, 2024 12:11 PM
- Hymettos is a long mountain in Attica, which separates the plain (pedion) around the city of Athens from the interior of Attica (Mesogaia). It is divided into a northern section (Megas Hymettos) and a southern section (Anydros Hymettos) by the Pinari gorge. It was the site of marble quarries, forests, bee cultivation, and various cults.