The Near East: Whites Overwhelmed Nonetheless, the history of the ancient middle east is dominated by centuries of Amongst them were the phoenicians, who through trade established http://www.stormfront.org/whitehistory/hwr7.htm
Extractions: MARCH OF THE TITANS - A HISTORY OF THE WHITE RACE Chapter 7: The Near East - Whites Overwhelmed The racial make-up of the original inhabitants of the Near East - that is from Turkey to modern day Iran, including the areas known today as Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Palestine and Egypt, was by the year 4000 BC, predominantly original White Mediterranean, with scattered groups of Alpine and Proto-Nordic sub groupings amongst them. These original White inhabitants were strengthened by the arrival of large numbers of Nordic Indo-Europeans who started spreading south from their ancestral homeland in southern Russia from around 3000 BC onwards. In addition to these White peoples, another grouping was to play a significant role in the history of the Near East - the Semitic speaking peoples (this encompasses a wide range of peoples, including groups known to history as the ancient Jews and Arabic peoples). These Semitic speaking peoples eventually came to predominate the entire Middle East, entering the original White territories as laborers, traders, immigrants and military conquerors. A map of the region under discussion in this chapter: Virtually every country shown here was subjected to invasions by Indo-European Nordics, who then set up White civilizations - only to be later submerged into a mass of Semitic, Mongoloid and Hamiic (mixed peoples) who came to work in the nations as slaves or as conventional laborers.
Ancient Near East Chronology Arameans begin invading the middle east from Arabia, and their language subsequentlybecomes the Hebrews and phoenicians destroy the Philistines. http://www.gis.net/~pldr/anech.html
Extractions: Guti overrun Sumeria (2200) before Ur restoration in 2100. Egyptian Middle Kingdom starts (c. 2080) and controls Palestine and Syria. Hittites invade Anatolia. Amorite tribes invade out of Arabia and establish small states in Syria, Mesopotamia, and Larsa. Hurrians appear in northern Mesopotamia. Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations form in Greece. Start of 1800 B.C. Scenario 1800 to 1700 (turn 1):
Middle East & Inner Asia WWW Research Institute: Part 4A THE middle east INNER ASIA PART 4A ancient CANAAN, ISRAEL, PALESTINE As they entered ancient Palestine, the phoenicians in the north and the http://www.stockton.edu/~gilmorew/consorti/1enear.htm
Extractions: For Modern Palestine since 1917, Go to PART 8. Modern Era in the Middle East, 1918- We can locate Jericho on a map of the central portion of modern Israel : Map with site of Jericho And then deepen our sense of the ecological setting with a NASA overview map which shows Jericho near the mouth of the Jordan River, with the Dead Sea and the West Bank: NASA MAP with Jericho and surroundings In the succeeding era, Jericho flourished as a Neolithic mud-brick walled
Extractions: TITLE AUTHOR KEYWORD ISBN These Books And Others Have Been Purchased on Amazon Marketplace Thru This Website ..... (AAA) The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East (Five Volume Set) (1) Babylon (Ancient Peoples and Places) Egypt, Canaan, and Israel in Ancient Times History Begins at Sumer: Thirty-Nine "Firsts" in Recorded History The Ancient Near East: Ancient History Series Volume I ... Alexandria: City of the Western Mind Table of Contents Civilizations - Cultures - Areas - Regions - Prehistory Culture Egypt, Canaan and Israel in Ancient Times
General Ancient History NEW PERSPECTIVES ON AGRICULTURAL ORIGINS IN THE ancient NEAR east ArabNet The Resource for the Arab World in the middle east and North Africa http://www.teacheroz.com/generalancient.htm
Ancient History Phoenician settlements on coast of what is now Syria and Lebanon. one ofthem, Seleucis I, establishes middle east empire with capitals at Antioch http://www.factmonster.com/ipka/A0001198.html
Extractions: Ads_kid=80235;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_xp1='';Ads_yp1='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';Ads_cnturl='';Ads_sec=0;Ads_channels='_GNM_Family,_GNM_QLook,_GNM_QPlus,_GNM_RON_Pop-Under,_GNM_RON_Pop-Up,_GNM_RON_Q,_GNM_Under18'; Reference Desk Atlas Almanacs Dictionary Encyclopedia ... World History Some Ancient Civilizations Ra, Egyptian Sun God B.C. See also Egyptian Mythology The Great Pyramid at Giza (c. 2680 B.C. Kim Storm B.C. Peter F. Harrington Pythagoras B.C. Buddha B.C. B.C. B.C. See also Greek and Roman Mythology Tina Diodati Plato B.C. Augustus Caesar B.C. A.D. Mayan Hieroglyphics (c. 200 B.C. Pantheon in Rome(27 B.C. ; c. A.D. See also Greek and Roman Mythology Elaine Ouellette
Extractions: Echmoun A Phoenician Temple The principal God of the city of Sidon and his lover Astarte Podium for the Phoenician Gods Phoenicia , ancient designation of a narrow strip of territory on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea, now largely in modern Lebanon. The territory, about 320 km (about 200 mi) long and from 8 to 25 km (5 to 15 mi) wide, was bounded on the east by the Lebanon Mountains. The southern boundary was Mount Carmel; the northern boundary was generally accepted to be the Eleutherus River, now called the Kabîr, which forms the northern boundary of Lebanon. Although its inhabitants had a homogeneous civilization and considered themselves a single nation, Phoenicia was not a unified state but a group of city-kingdoms, one of which usually dominated the others. The most important of these cities were Simyra, Zarephath (Sarafand), Byblos , Jubeil, Arwad (Rouad), Acco (Akko), Sidon (Saydâ), Tripolis (Tripoli), Tyre (Sur), and Berytus ( Beirut ). The two most dominant were Tyre and Sidon, which alternated as sites of the ruling power.
Near Eastern Studies 181 Introduction to the History of the ancient Near east 192 First Year Seminarin ACABS 383 The ArabIsraeli Conflict in middle east Literature http://www.umich.edu/~neareast/courses.html
Near Eastern Languages And Civilization Near eastern Studies Biblical and ancient. 73 credits as follows The library participated in the Library of Congress middle east Cooperative program http://www.washington.edu/students/gencat/academic/near_eastern.html
Extractions: Search Directories Reference Tools UW Home ... Degree Programs 229 Denny Near Eastern languages and civilization focuses on the languages and civilizations of the Near East with an emphasis on the ancient and medieval roots of these civilizations as well as more recent cultural developments. Each language offered represents a major literary tradition. Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and Central Asian Turkic are the languages of the most significant literary manifestations of Islamic civilization. Hebrew and Aramaic are the languages of the Bible and are central to Judaism and Jewish culture. Egyptian languages (Coptic, Hieroglyphic) and other Mesopotamian and Mediterranean languages (Akkadian, Ugaritic, Phoenician) are important to the ancient and Christian cultures of the Near East. These languages are taught in conjunction with courses on the social, cultural, and religious history of the Near East, providing students with a broad understanding and solid foundation for more advanced studies or professional career development. Adviser
New Page 4 bullet, The History of the ancient Near east extensive info and links! bullet,History of the middle east Data Base http://www.historyteacher.net/GlobalStudies/MidEast_EarlyHistory.htm
Extractions: Ancient Egypt: The Akhet-Aten Home Page - The internet source for Amarna period information Akhet Egyptology: The Horizon to the Past Amarna Letters Amarna Resources ... Part 3 - by Dr. Sameh M. Arab; via Arab World Books Memphis (1) Memphis (2) Memphis of the White Walls by Marie Parsons Mysteries of Egypt (Civilization.ca) ... World Heritage Sites in Egypt
Ancient Near East: Internet Resources Mesopotamia, Egypt and the ancient Near east World Civilizations Reader, CUNY, NY There are also links to photographic archives of early middle east http://www.internet-at-work.com/hos_mcgrane/mesopotamia/eg_neast_intro.html
Extractions: Marilee Lindgren This track is designed for the use of students. The goal is for students to learn more about some aspects of Ancient Mesopotamia by following selected web links. Topics include: artifacts, the wheel, chariots, sailboats, maps, and Hammurabi's Code. This is part of a larger site Track Star , web-based lessons desiged by other teachers and archived at this site. Mesopotamia Urbana Middle School, Illinois Classroom projects, artifacts and selected links produced by middle school classes in as part of a museum grant to provide middle school ancient history resources on the Internet. Visitors to the site will find student projects on a variety of topics including: Hanging Gardens and Ziggurat , Tablet, Cylinder Seal and Bulla, Cities, Wheels, Writing, Religion, Helmets, and Sumerian City - Ur. Ancient Mesopotamia
Mr. Dowling's African History Page civilizations of West Africa in a lesson designed for middle school students . ancient Egypt Western Religions The middle east and North Africa http://www.mrdowling.com/609ancafr.html
Extractions: Home E-Mail Download Lessons Interactive Quiz ... South America A Great Oral Tradition The European colonial powers called Africa the Dark Continent when they began their explorations. They saw it as a vast and dangero us place filled with savage people, but Africa has been home to many advanced, exotic civilizations. Many have been buried beneath the sands of time, but we know of others, and archaeologists continue to uncover more clues about ancient African civilizations. West Africa has a great oral tradition. A griot is a learned storyteller, entertainer, and historian. Often a griot will memorize the genealogy, or family history, of everyone in a village going back centuries. American writer Alex Haley met a griot in 1966 that had memorized the entire story of the village of Juffure to a date two centuries in the past when his ancestor was enslaved. The old griot had talked for nearly two hours up to then . . . the oldest of these fours sons, Kunta, went away from his village and he was never seen again . . . I sat as if I were carved of stone. My blood seemed to have congealed. This man whose lifetime had been in this back-country African village had no way in the world to know that he had just echoed what I had heard all through my boyhood years on my grandmas front porch in Henning, Tennessee.
Extractions: BaghdadMuseum.info Middle Eastern Archaeology and Culture home topics news articles ... civilizations >> canaanite introduction : this canaanite and civilizations directory page is integrated thematically within this meta-resource for canaanite information .. the resource links on this page may have been reviewed by an editor for general as well as specific canaanite and civilizations links, reviews, images, books, articles, forums, and possibly even canaanite related jobs. www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/indiv/area/Midd :: results for canaanite Selected links provided by the Columbia University Department of Middle East Studies. Features incude .. Akkadian language: Babylonian and Assyrian cuneiform texts .. Ancient Near East Costumes .. Aram Society for Syro-Mesopotamian Studies .. Babylonian and Egyptian Mat
Columbia University Introduction to Major Topics in Oriental Civilization The middle east and India Introduction to the Civilization of the ancient Near east http://fp.arizona.edu/mesassoc/Directory/Columbia.htm
University Of Michigan Janet Richards (archaeology Northeast Africa and ancient Near east) Robin Barlow (economic development of contemporary middle east) http://fp.arizona.edu/mesassoc/Directory/Michigan.htm
History Of The Mediterranean Region: Information From Answers.com The phoenicians spread through the western Mediterranean including North Africa Alexander s empire quickly disintegrated, and the middle east, Egypt, http://www.answers.com/topic/history-of-the-mediterranean-region
Extractions: showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping history of the Mediterranean region Wikipedia history of the Mediterranean region The history of the Mediterranean region is the history of the interaction of the cultures and peoples of the lands surrounding the Mediterranean Sea superhighway of transport, trade and cultural exchange between diverse peoples. Its history is important to understanding the origin and development of the Egyptian Greek Latin Arab/Persian ... Western Civilization as we understand it today. Two of the first human civilizations began in the Mediterranean area. The Nile River valley was unified under the Pharaohs in the fourth millennium BC. Soon after, civilization developed in Mesopotamia and quickly spread through the fertile crescent to the east coast of the sea and throughout the Levant , which happens to make the Mediterranean countries of Syria Lebanon , and Israel part of the Cradle of Humanity . These areas shared similar climates and geographies, but it was more difficult to spread technologies and crops to other portions of the Mediterranean basin.
Phoenician Languages -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article and who inhabits much of the middle east and northern Africa) Arab conquest the The earliest known inscriptions in Phoenician come from (An ancient http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/p/ph/phoenician_languages.htm
Extractions: Phoenician was a language originally spoken in the coastal region then called (An ancient maritime country (a collection of city states) at eastern end of the Mediterranean) Phoenicia (now Lebanon). Phoenician was a (Click link for more info and facts about Semitic language) Semitic language of the (The extinct language of the Semitic people who occupied Canaan before the Israelite conquest) Canaanite subgroup, closely related to (The ancient Canaanitic language of the Hebrews that has been revived as the official language of Israel) Hebrew . It is known only from inscriptions - such as Ahiram's coffin, Kilamuwa's tomb, Yehawmilk's at (An ancient Mediterranean seaport that was a thriving city state in Phoenicia during the second millenium BC; was the chief port for the export of papyrus; located in Lebanon north of Beirut; now partially excavated) Byblos , etc. - and occasional glosses in books in other languages; Roman authors such as (Click link for more info and facts about Sallust) Sallust allude to books in Punic, but none have survived (except occasionally in translation; eg Mago's treatise.) The significantly divergent later form of the language that was spoken in the Phoenician colony