Personal tools
You are here: Home Old Indexes of places settlement

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

settlement

Creators: Sean Gillies Copyright © The Creators. Sharing and remixing permitted under terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License (cc-by).
Last modified Aug 18, 2010 03:54 PM
KML Download KML GeoRSS Download Atom + GeoRSS
Place Tekke by David Braund — last modified Oct 20, 2012 03:53 PM
An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 87 A4 Tekke
Place Tekmon by W.M. Murray — last modified Feb 20, 2020 11:19 PM
An ancient settlement, attested by literary or documentary sources, whose precise location cannot be determined today
Place Tel Afar/Ad Pontem? by M. Roaf — last modified Jul 07, 2013 03:59 PM
An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 89 E4 Tel Afar/Ad Pontem?
Place Tel Anafa by E.M. Meyers — last modified Aug 11, 2023 10:52 AM
Tel Anafa is an archaeological site of the Upper Galilee in Israel. The site was inhabited from the Early Bronze Age through the early Roman period and has a notable Hellenistic phase.
Place Tel Arad by Jeffrey Becker — last modified Oct 31, 2023 03:00 PM
A multi-period settlement with occupation stretching from the Chalcolithic period to the second century A.D.
Place Tẹl Ȧviv by B. Siewert-Mayer — last modified Dec 09, 2023 03:02 PM
A place from the TAVO Index
Place Tel Bet Yerah/Khirbet el-Kerak by E.M. Meyers — last modified Mar 08, 2023 04:45 PM
An ancient settlement, represented by a massive mound located on the southern coast of the Sea of Galilee, now partly covered by modern structures. Recurrent periods of habitation on the site date from at least the third milennium BCE to Islamic times.
Place Tel Dalit by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Aug 13, 2020 08:38 AM
Walled town in the northern Shephelah dated to the Early Bronze Age.
Place Tel Erani by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Mar 20, 2020 09:32 AM
One of the largest Early Bronze Age mounds in the southern Levant, located approximately 20 km east of Ashkelon. The site shows signs of habitation as early as the Chalcolithic Era, with a significant remains from the Bronze Age and additional remains from the Iron Age, Persian, Hellenistic, and Islamic periods.
Place Tel Hazor by Clifflena Tiah — last modified Apr 29, 2023 03:35 PM
Tel Hazor (Hebrew: תל חצור‎‎) is an archaeological site located in the southern Hula Valley overlooking Lake Merom. From the Middle Bronze Age to the Israelite period in the ninth century B.C., Hazor was the largest fortified city in the region. It served as a commercial center with links to Babylon and Syria. In the Book of Joshua, Hazor is described as “the head of all those kingdoms” (Josh. 11:10).
Place Tel Hefer by J.P. Brown — last modified Oct 20, 2012 04:11 PM
An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 69 A5 Tel Hefer
Place Tel Jatt by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Aug 01, 2018 09:02 AM
A site between the Sharon Plain and the Samarian Hills on which the modern town of Jatt is built. The site contains numerous Bronze Age burials and signs of habitation as late as the Bronze Age. The site has been proposed as a possible location for the town of Ginti-kirmil mentioned in the Amarna letters.
Place Tel Kabri by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Oct 15, 2018 08:12 PM
Archaeological site near the modern settlement of Kabri in northern Israel. The site shows signs of occupation from the late Neolithic period and the Early (Ia-II) and Middle (IIA-B) Bronze Ages. The site was an important city in the Middle Bronze Age, rapidly expanding during the 18th century BCE with the construction of a rampart and one of the largest known Canaanite palaces. It was abandoned by about 1500 BCE, and later habitations (in the Iron Age, Hellenistic, and Ottoman periods) were of smaller scale.
Place Tel Mevorakh by E.M. Meyers — last modified Jul 10, 2020 06:22 PM
An ancient place, cited: BAtlas 69 A4 Tel Mevorakh
Place Tel Michal by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Aug 01, 2018 10:08 PM
A site on the Mediterranean coast of Israel with signs of habitation from the Middle Bronze Age and the Persian through the Roman periods. In the Hellenistic and Roman periods, its purpose was primarily military, and a series of forts occupied the site until around 50 CE. A small watchtower or lighthouse was built on the site in the eighth-ninth centuries CE, after which it was abandoned.
Place Tel Mor by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Jun 15, 2021 02:30 PM
Archaeological site on the northern bank of the Lachish River with signs of habitation dated from the Late Bronze Age to the Hellenistic period.
Place Tel Qashish by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Jul 27, 2021 04:52 PM
Village in the Jezreel Valley inhabited throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages.
Place Tel Shiqmona by E.M. Meyers — last modified Mar 14, 2023 10:00 PM
An ancient settlement located near the coast of the modern city of Haifa, Israel. Archaeological evidence indicates habitation there from the late Bronze Age through the late Byzantine period. Strabo describes the city as a ruin in his time.
Place Tel Yarmut by Gabriel Mckee — last modified May 12, 2021 03:23 PM
Bronze Age site near Tel Beit Shemesh in Israel. The site shows signs of habitation from the 17th century BCE-4th century CE.
Place Tel Yokneam by Gabriel Mckee — last modified Mar 21, 2018 12:30 PM
Settlement in northern Palestine inhabited from the Early Bronze Age through the Mamluk period.

Also in this section