A repository for original research, news, and other information on the history, politics and archeology surrounding the Arab semitic world and its related peoples.
The typical Zionist bias against other Semites is shown in this article, although the discovery is still important. The Arabs came with no knowledge of the sea, and drafted craftsmen, sailors and shipbuilders from the local population," Drori said. Did the Arabs of coastal Arabia and Yemen and the gulf region not ever go fishing? But perhaps Drori is simply stating the obvious, that the Palestinian inhabitants at that time, coastal dwellers of Palestine and descendents of Canaanites had significant seafaring experience. Link to Discovery article.
It’s been a while since i’ve been able to update. The usual excuses. A few stories of importance or at least excitement recently. Giant Camel bones found in Syria , estimated to be 100,000 years old. These guys were as big as giraffes or elephants. It seems the animals were mostly hunted for food rather than used as transportation. And seperately, at the lovely Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago, a talk on November 5th with the following abstract. The Israeli Antiquities Authority has a history of excluding, and even destroying non "Israelite" archaeological finds in Palestine. This find by the IAA bolsters evidence that the majority of civilizational activity in Palestine in the 9th century BC and beyond were in the coastal regions where the indigenous Canaanite population has always lived, and continue to today as modern Palestinians. "Yavneh, a city some 20 km south of Tel Aviv, was a Philistine city on the border with Judah. It was occupied for numerous...
"Angawi said he calculated that over 300 historical buildings in Mecca and Medina have already been destroyed . Also, the Washington-based Gulf Institute has estimated that, in the past two decades, 95 percent of the millennium-old buildings in Mecca have been demolished."
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