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  • The observatory at the Eretz Israel Museum AKA Haartz Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel, collections: Glass Pavilion, Kadman Numismatic Pavilion, Nechushtan copper Pavilion, Ceramics Pavilion, Ethnography and Folklore pavilion, Man & His Work Center, Postal and Philatelic Museum, middle east and Israeli archeology and history,
    ir_14185_fs_PSh.jpg
  • The Planetarium at the Eretz Israel Museum AKA Haartz Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel, collections: Glass Pavilion, Kadman Numismatic Pavilion, Nechushtan copper Pavilion, Ceramics Pavilion, Ethnography and Folklore pavilion, Man & His Work Center, Postal and Philatelic Museum, middle east and Israeli archeology and history,
    ir_14245_fs_PSh.jpg
  • Neglected archeological ruins. Photographed in Israel
    AMS_f_Archaeology_6359.jpg
  • Neglected archeological ruins. Photographed in Israel
    AMS_f_Archaeology_6348.jpg
  • Carmo Archeological Museum, Largo do Carmo, Lisbon, Portugal
    IR_Lisbon_E6913-Pano.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5883.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5866.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5864.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5863.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5857.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5855.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site The house of Dionysos
    IR_57574_new.jpg
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site
    RH_Volubilis_03601A.JPG
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site Mosaicc floor
    RH_Volubilis_03589A.JPG
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site Mosaicc floor
    RH_Volubilis_03585A.JPG
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site
    RH_Volubilis_03578A.JPG
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5861.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5858.jpg
  • Carmo Archeological Museum, Largo do Carmo, Lisbon, Portugal
    IR_Lisbon_E6912.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site The house of Dionysos Mosaic
    IR_57569_New.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5884.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5878.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5872.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5869.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5867.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5865.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5859.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site details of the floor of a Roman period house
    BT_Pafos_138.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site details of the floor of a Roman period house
    BT_Pafos_137.jpg
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site Circumcised phallic sculpture
    RH_Volubilis_03604.JPG
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site Mosaicc floor
    RH_Volubilis_03598A.JPG
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site Mosaicc floor
    RH_Volubilis_03596A.JPG
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site Mosaicc floor
    RH_Volubilis_03594A.JPG
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site Mosaicc floor
    RH_Volubilis_03584A.JPG
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL15_fs.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5882.jpg
  • Tel Dor (Khirbet el-Burj), is an archeological site located on Israel's Mediterranean coast next to modern moshav Dor, about 30 kilometers south of Haifa. Lying on a small headland at the north side of a protected inlet, it is identified with D-jr of Egyptian sources, Biblical Dor, and with Dor/Dora of Greek and Roman sources.
    IA_Tel-Dor_5870.jpg
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site
    RH_Volubilis_03613.JPG
  • Morocco, Roman Ruins at the Volubilis Archeological Site Mosaicc floor
    RH_Volubilis_03597A.JPG
  • Israel, Golan Heights, The Nimrod Fortress (Qala'at Namrud?), an ancient fortress, built around 1229 by Al-Aziz Uthman, in the northern Golan Heights. The fort has been reconstructed and enlarged through the years by different rulers of the Holy Land, until it was ruined by an earthquake in the 18th century.
    CL_F081031CL03.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL24_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL12_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL10_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL09_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL26_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL25_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL22_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL21_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL16_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL14_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL13_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL07_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL06_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL05_fs.jpg
  • Israel, coastal plains, Caesarea, The Hippodrome built by king Herod first century BCE. Re-enactment of life in the Roman era. Horse racing, sport events and entertainment show reconstruction during Sukkot, October 7, 2009,
    SL_F091007SL23_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Roman period house of Theseus
    IR_57603_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Roman period House of Aion
    IR_57593_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site The house of Dionysos
    IR_57574_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Roman period House of Aion
    IR_57587_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site The house of Dionysos
    IR_57570_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site entrance
    IR_57562_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site the 13th century Saranda Kolones castle the harbour and bay in the background
    IR_57615_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site the 13th century Saranda Kolones castle the harbour and bay in the background
    IR_57614_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site the 13th century Saranda Kolones castle
    IR_57611_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Visitor centre and gift shop
    IR_57609_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Roman period house of Theseus
    IR_57608_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Roman period house of Theseus
    IR_57605_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Roman period house of Theseus
    IR_57602_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Roman period house of Theseus
    IR_57600_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Roman period house of Theseus
    IR_57599_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site Roman period House of Aion
    IR_57584_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site The house of Dionysos
    IR_57580_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site The house of Dionysos
    IR_57567_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site entrance
    IR_57561_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site The house of Dionysos
    IR_57577_fs.jpg
  • Cyprus, Pafos Archeological site The house of Dionysos
    IR_57569_fs.jpg
  • Chauchilla Cemetery is a cemetery that contains prehispanic mummified human remains and archeological artifacts, located in the desert 30 kilometres south of the city of Nazca in Peru.
    BT_Cemetery-Nazca_142.jpg
  • Chauchilla Cemetery is a cemetery that contains prehispanic mummified human remains and archeological artifacts, located in the desert 30 kilometres south of the city of Nazca in Peru.
    BT_Cemetery-Nazca_139.jpg
  • Chauchilla Cemetery is a cemetery that contains prehispanic mummified human remains and archeological artifacts, located in the desert 30 kilometres south of the city of Nazca in Peru.
    BT_Cemetery-Nazca_141.jpg
  • Chauchilla Cemetery is a cemetery that contains prehispanic mummified human remains and archeological artifacts, located in the desert 30 kilometres south of the city of Nazca in Peru.
    BT_Cemetery-Nazca_140.jpg
  • Chauchilla Cemetery is a cemetery that contains prehispanic mummified human remains and archeological artifacts, located in the desert 30 kilometres south of the city of Nazca in Peru.
    BT_Cemetery-Nazca_138.jpg
  • USA, Missouri, Washington State Park Petroglyph Archeological Site Native American Rock Art.
    HS_Indian paintings_005_fs.jpg
  • Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel. Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    UT_Shivta_DSC6092.jpg
  • Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel. Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    UT_Shivta_DSC6070.jpg
  • The Centre Church (VI century CE), Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel. Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    UT_Shivta_DSC6086.jpg
  • The south Church, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel. Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    UT_Shivta_DSC6074.jpg
  • The south Church, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel. Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    UT_Shivta_DSC6072.jpg
  • General view Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel, 49 Km southwest of beer sheva, east to Nizzana (Nitsana). Long considered a classic Nabatean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    AH_SHIVTA7635_fs_PSh.jpg
  • General view Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel, 49 Km southwest of beer sheva, east to Nizzana (Nitsana). Long considered a classic Nabatean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    AH_SHIVTA7627_fs_PSh.jpg
  • The south Church, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel, 49 Km southwest of beer sheva, east to Nizzana (Nitsana). Long considered a classic Nabatean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    AH_b_SHIVTA8106_PSh.jpg
  • The dwellings within the walled fort at Tel Seva, Israel Tel Sheva, the mound of biblical Beersheba, is located in the northern Negev, several kilometers east of the present-day city of Be'er Sheva. The Arabic name of the mound, Tell es-Sab'a, preserves the biblical name; the archeological finds support its identification with biblical Beersheba. A large area of the site was excavated between 1969 and 1976, producing several layers of the remains of settlement, including fortified towns of the early Israelite period and the monarchic period of Judah, covered by remnants of small fortresses dated from the Persian to the Roman periods
    AH_b_TEL-SHEVA7071_PSh.jpg
  • The caves of mount Carmel are located on the western slopes of Mt. Carmel, some 20 km. south of Haifa, where Nahal Me'arot (Valley of the Caves) emerges into the Coastal Plain. They were first excavated in the 1920s and 1930s. Then new digs were conducted from the late 1960s onwards, using advanced scientific methods based on modern geological, archeological and palynological (paleontological study of pollen, fossils, etc.) research. Flint tools, animal bones and human burials found in the Carmel Caves contribute greatly to the understanding of the physical and cultural evolution of man in the early phases of his existence.
    ah_b_CARMEL-CAVES-1582_PSh.jpg
  • The south Church, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel, 49 Km southwest of beer sheva, Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to Santa Catarina, Egypt, The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    CL_F091116CL37.jpg
  • The south Church, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel, 49 Km southwest of beer sheva, Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to Santa Catarina, Egypt, The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    CL_F091116CL35.jpg
  • The south Church, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel, 49 Km southwest of beer sheva, Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to Santa Catarina, Egypt, The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    CL_F091116CL34.jpg
  • The south Church, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel. Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    UT_Shivta_DSC6096.jpg
  • The Centre Church (VI century CE), Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel. Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    UT_Shivta_DSC6089.jpg
  • Cross Shaped Baptizing pool, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel. Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    UT_Shivta_DSC6081.jpg
  • Cross Shaped Baptizing pool, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel. Long considered a classic Nabataean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    UT_Shivta_DSC6080.jpg
  • Governors house, Shivta (Sobota) is an archeological site in the Negev Desert of Israel, 49 Km southwest of beer sheva, east to Nizzana (Nitsana). Long considered a classic Nabatean town and terminal on the ancient spice route, archeologists are now considering the possibility that the town was actually a Byzantine agricultural colony and a way station for pilgrims en route to the Santa Catarina, Egypt, located on the supposed site of Mount Sinai. The new assessment of Shivta is based on an analysis of the irrigation system found at the site, which bears parallels to Byzantine structures elsewhere. Until now, the preponderance of Byzantine ruins were believed to be the remains of a monastic community that established itself on the ruins of an earlier Nabatean town. Shivta was declared a world heritage site by UNESCO on June 2005.
    AH_SHIVTA7630_fs_PSh.jpg
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