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  • Israel, Northern District Ein Afek Nature Reserve on the Naaman River The Crusader mill station
    AH_Ein-Afek_0318.jpg
  • Israel, Northern District Ein Afek Nature Reserve on the Naaman River
    AH_Ein-Afek_0299.jpg
  • Israel, Jerusalem Yad Vashem, the memorial to the Six Million Jews murdered during the holocaust in world war two. It is also a research and documentation center. The Pillar of Heroism
    AH_Yad-Vashem_2460.jpg
  • Structure in the old Ashkelon port, Israel
    AH_Ashkelon_13112.jpg
  • Israel, Jerusalem, The City of David (Ir David‎) is claimed to be the oldest settled neighborhood of Jerusalem and a major archaeological site due to recognition as biblical Jerusalem
    AH_Jerusalem_2371.jpg
  • Israel, Beit Shearim, interior of a catacomb. 2-4 centuries CE (the Roman period). The people of Beit She'arim dug ornate catacombs, interconnected by tunnels, creating a huge underground necropolis. The caves are full of stylized sarcophagi, decorated with Jewish and secular symbols. During excavations done in this site, more than 30 burial caves were discovered
    AH_f_Beit Shearim_00240.jpg
  • The grounds of the Israel Aquarium in Jerusalem, Israel
    AH_Israel-Aquarium_01613.jpg
  • Remain of the Roman Basilica, Ashkelon National park, Israel
    AH_Ashkelon_13117.jpg
  • The grounds of the Israel Aquarium in Jerusalem, Israel
    AH_Israel-Aquarium_01616.jpg
  • Remain of the Roman Basilica, Ashkelon National park, Israel
    AH_Ashkelon_13125.jpg
  • Israel, Jerusalem Mountains, Ein Hemed National Park (AKA Aqua Bella) The farming area
    AH_Ein-Hemed_0206.jpg
  • Israel, Jerusalem Yad Vashem, the memorial to the Six Million Jews murdered during the holocaust in world war two. It is also a research and documentation center. The Pillar of Heroism
    AH_Yad-Vashem_2459.jpg
  • Israel, Northern District Ein Afek Nature Reserve on the Naaman River The Crusader mill station
    AH_Ein-Afek_0274.jpg
  • Israel, Haifa, the Stella Maris Carmelite Church, Mt. Carmel statue of the virgin Carmen Virgen del Carmen Reina de Chile
    AH_Stella-Maris_0760.jpg
  • Israel, Carmel mountain, the statue of Elijah at the highest peak of Mt. Carmel called Muchraka. This is, by legend, the exact place where Elijah had his confrontation with the emissaries of Baal. (1 King 18:20) A Carmelite monastery was erected there in 1868
    AH_Muchraka-13024.jpg
  • Israel, Caesarea, a town built by Herod the Great about 25 - 13 BC, The ancient harbour
    AH_Caesarea_03573.jpg
  • Israel, Caesarea, The old harbour now a resort beach Originally built by Herod the Great in the first century CE
    AH_Caesarea_2422.jpg
  • Remain of the Roman Basilica, Ashkelon National park, Israel
    AH_Ashkelon_13127.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean General view. During the Hellenistic period Bet Shean had a Greek population and was called Scythopolis. In 64 BCE it was taken by the Romans, rebuilt, and made the capital of the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Samaria.
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00739.jpg
  • Eshkol National Park (Habasor National Park), Negev, Israel
    AH_Eshkol-National-Park_00525.jpg
  • Mamshit, Negev, Israel. Mamshit is the Nabatean city of Memphis. In the Nabatean period, Mamshit was important because it sat on the route from the Idumean Mountains to the Arava, continued on to Beersheva or to Hebron and Jerusalem. The city covers ten acres and is the smallest but best restored city in the Negev Desert. The once-luxurious houses have unusual architecture not found in any other Nabatean city.
    AH_f_Mamshit_2358_1.jpg
  • Israel, Beit Shearim, interior of a catacomb. The Jewish town of Beit She'arim flourished during the 2-4 centuries CE (the Roman period). The people of Beit She'arim dug ornate catacombs, interconnected by tunnels, creating a huge underground necropolis - a city of the dead. The caves are full of stylized sarcophagi, decorated with Jewish and secular symbols.  during excavations done in this site, more than 30 burial caves were discovere
    AH_Beit-Shearim_4741.jpg
  • Poleg River Nature Reserve - Yakum Park, Near Natanya, Israel. The  Wingate Institute in the background
    AH_Yakum-Park_01140.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean public latrine with no seperation between them and no devision between male and female users. During the Hellenistic period Bet Shean had a Greek population and was called Scythopolis. In 64 BCE it was taken by the Romans, rebuilt, and made the capital of the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Samaria that were centers of Greco-Roman culture.
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00736.jpg
  • Metzada is the site of ancient palaces and fortifications in Israel on top of an isolated rock cliff on the eastern edge of the Judean desert overlooking the Dead Sea. where Jewish zealot insurgents held out for three years against the Romans after the fall of Jerusalem in 70C.E. and then committed mass suicide to avoid capture. Metzada has remained a symbol of Jewish heroism.
    AH_b_MASADA7049_PSh.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean ancient columns found on the site,
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00808_1_1.jpg
  • Israel, Negev, The Ramon Crater, The Ramon Crater is the world's largest karst erosion cirque. It is located at the peak of Mount Negev. The Ramon Crater is 40 kilometers long and 2 to 10 kilometers wide, shaped like an elongated heart.
    AH_f_Ramon-crater_2209.jpg
  • Israel, Masada, The fortifications and walls around the Metzada fortress, Metzada is the site of ancient palaces and fortifications in Israel on top of an isolated rock cliff on the eastern edge of the Judean desert overlooking the Dead Sea. where Jewish zealot insurgents held out for three years against the Romans after the fall of Jerusalem in 70C.E. and then committed mass suicide to avoid capture. Metzada has remained a symbol of Jewish heroism.
    AH_f_Masada_2047_1.jpg
  • Israel, Massada The Northern Palace
    AH_f_Masada_2027.jpg
  • St. Nilos church (Eastern Church) in Mamshit from the 4th century CE. Mamshit is the Nabatean city of Memphis. In the Nabatean period, Mamshit was important because it sat on the route from the Idumean Mountains to the Arava, continued on to Beersheva or to Hebron and Jerusalem. The city covers ten acres and is the smallest but best restored city in the Negev Desert.
    AH_f_Mamshit_2384_2.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean, Scythopolis, The entrance to the Roman theatre dating from the first century CE.
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00689.jpg
  • Israel, Upper Galilee, Rafting in the Jordan river
    AH_Jordan-River_9569.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, Ein Gedi Resort and Spa
    AH_Ein-Gedi_04239.jpg
  • Roman ruins at Hamat Gader, Israel Hamat Gader is located in the Yarmuk Valley on the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee, about 20 kilometers from Tiberias. and has 4 springs one of sweet water and four of mineral water. other attractions are an archaeological site with reconstructed Roman baths, which are regarded as the most impressive in the world; an amphitheatre and a 5th century synagogue. There is also a crocodile farm
    ah_b_HAMAT-GADER-6512_PSh.jpg
  • Israel, Rosh Hanikra, (lit head of the grottos) located on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea, in the Western Galilee near the border with Lebanon. The cable car to the grottos
    AH_Rosh-Hanikra_01118.jpg
  • The white cliff at Rosh Hanikra, Israel. Rosh Hanikra is a Limestone cliff on the beach of Upper-Galilee on the border between Israel and Lebanon, chiselled out into labyrinthine grottoes filled with seawater formed by the geological and biological processes and by waves lapping on the soft rock.
    AH_Rosh-Hanikra_01117.jpg
  • Israel, Ramla, The White Mosque (8th Century CE) The latter added (13th century) White tower
    AH_f_Ramla_1117.jpg
  • Israel, Nazareth, Statue of St. Joseph in St.Joseph's church
    AH_Nazareth_00230.jpg
  • Israel, Negev, Mitzpe Ramon, The Alpaca Farm
    AH_Alpaca_2319.jpg
  • Israel, western Galilee, Acre, The crusaders fort later converted and used by the British as a prison.
    AH_Acre_05813.jpg
  • Israel, Acre, Sea Wall promenade
    AH_Acre_00845.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean ancient columns found on the site,
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00742.jpg
  • Israel, Massada The Northern Palace
    AH_f_Masada_2041_1.jpg
  • Israel, Massada The Northern Palace
    AH_f_Masada_2003_1.jpg
  • Israel, Masada Tourists visiting the site
    AH_f_Masada_1988_1.jpg
  • St. Nilos church (Eastern Church) in Mamshit from the 4th century CE. Mamshit is the Nabatean city of Memphis. In the Nabatean period, Mamshit was important because it sat on the route from the Idumean Mountains to the Arava, continued on to Beersheva or to Hebron and Jerusalem. The city covers ten acres and is the smallest but best restored city in the Negev Desert.
    AH_f_Mamshit_2387_2.jpg
  • Steam is discharged from a flue at the Orot Rabin power station in Hadera, Israel
    AH_f_Hadera_01562.jpg
  • Ein Gedi, Israel, Nahal Arugot (Arugot stream) flows into the Dead Sea. All the water is collected for agriculture before it reaches the Dead Sea
    AH_f_Ein-Gedy_1855.jpg
  • Remains of a headless greek marble statue, Photographed at Caesarea, Israel
    AH_f_Caesarea_2498.jpg
  • Ruins of the Roman public bathhouse, Caesarea, a town built by Herod the Great about 25 - 13 BC, lies on the sea-coast of Israel
    AH_f_Caesarea_2454.jpg
  • Closeup of fish swimming in a large aquarium
    AH_f_Aquarium_01684.jpg
  • Cacti garden in the desert
    AH_f_Alpaca_2293.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean, Scythopolis, The entrance to the Roman theatre dating from the first century CE.
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00728.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean Roman theatre the scaenae frons an elaborate backdrop wall behind the stage, dating from the first century CE. During the Hellenistic period Bet Shean had a Greek population and was called Scythopolis. In 64 BCE it was taken by the Romans, rebuilt, and made the capital of the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Samaria that were centers of Greco-Roman culture.
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00716.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean Roman theatre the scaenae frons an elaborate backdrop wall behind the stage, dating from the first century CE. During the Hellenistic period Bet Shean had a Greek population and was called Scythopolis. In 64 BCE it was taken by the Romans, rebuilt, and made the capital of the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Samaria that were centers of Greco-Roman culture.
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00711.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean Roman theatre dating from the first century CE. During the Hellenistic period Bet Shean had a Greek population and was called Scythopolis. In 64 BCE it was taken by the Romans, rebuilt, and made the capital of the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Samaria that were centers of Greco-Roman culture. The city contains the best preserved Roman theater of ancient Samaria as well as a hippodrome, cardo, and other trademarks of the Roman influence. Excavations at the cite are ongoing and reveal no less than 18 successive ancient towns
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00708.jpg
  • Israel, Upper Galilee, Rafting in the Jordan river
    AH_Jordan-River_9565.jpg
  • Israel, Upper Galilee, Iyyon River Nature reserve The chalk cliffs. Spring April
    AH_DSC04074.jpg
  • Israel, Jerusalem Yad Vashem, the memorial to the Six Million Jews murdered during the holocaust in world war two. It is also a research and documentation center. The Pillar of Heroism
    AH_Yad-Vashem_2461.jpg
  • Israel, Caesarea, Ralli Museum of modern art the court yard
    AH_Museum_03695.jpg
  • Metzada is the site of ancient palaces and fortifications in Israel on top of an isolated rock cliff on the eastern edge of the Judean desert overlooking the Dead Sea. where Jewish zealot insurgents held out for three years against the Romans after the fall of Jerusalem in 70C.E. and then committed mass suicide to avoid capture. Metzada has remained a symbol of Jewish heroism.
    AH_b_MASADA7038_PSh.jpg
  • Monfort A Crusader castle in Western Galilee, Israel The ruins of the once splendid Montfort Crusader castle, are located on a precipitous rock crest, overlooking the Keziv river. The castle was constructed by Templar Crusader knights in the early 12th century. Short after completion the building was destroyed by Salah al Din after the defeat of the Crusaders at the Horns of Hittim on 3-4 July 1187.<br />
<br />
Five years later, the castle was re-conquered by the Crusaders, who restored it. In 1220, Montfort was sold to the Crusader Knights of the German Teutonic Order and gave it the name "Starkenberg" which means strong mountain
    ah_b_HA-MONFOR-555_PSh.jpg
  • Eshkol National Park (Habasor National Park), Negev, Israel
    AH_Eshkol-National-Park_00524.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean ancient columns found on the site,
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00780_1_1.jpg
  • male Tristram's Starling or Tristram's Grackle (Onychognathus tristramii). Photographed in Israel, Dead Sea, in December
    AH_f_Masada_2031.jpg
  • St. Nilos church (Eastern Church) in Mamshit from the 4th century CE. Mamshit is the Nabatean city of Memphis. In the Nabatean period, Mamshit was important because it sat on the route from the Idumean Mountains to the Arava, continued on to Beersheva or to Hebron and Jerusalem. The city covers ten acres and is the smallest but best restored city in the Negev Desert.
    AH_f_Mamshit_2380.jpg
  • St. Nilos church (Eastern Church) in Mamshit from the 4th century CE. Mamshit is the Nabatean city of Memphis. In the Nabatean period, Mamshit was important because it sat on the route from the Idumean Mountains to the Arava, continued on to Beersheva or to Hebron and Jerusalem. The city covers ten acres and is the smallest but best restored city in the Negev Desert.
    AH_f_Mamshit_2368_1.jpg
  • Mamshit, Negev, Israel. Mamshit is the Nabatean city of Memphis. In the Nabatean period, Mamshit was important because it sat on the route from the Idumean Mountains to the Arava, continued on to Beersheva or to Hebron and Jerusalem. The city covers ten acres and is the smallest but best restored city in the Negev Desert. The once-luxurious houses have unusual architecture not found in any other Nabatean city.
    AH_f_Mamshit_2335.jpg
  • Cacti garden in the desert
    AH_f_Alpaca_2292.jpg
  • The grounds of the Israel Aquarium in Jerusalem, Israel
    AH_Israel-Aquarium_01608.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean public latrine with no seperation between them and no devision between male and female users. During the Hellenistic period Bet Shean had a Greek population and was called Scythopolis. In 64 BCE it was taken by the Romans, rebuilt, and made the capital of the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Samaria that were centers of Greco-Roman culture.
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00737.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean Roman theatre the scaenae frons an elaborate backdrop wall behind the stage, dating from the first century CE. During the Hellenistic period Bet Shean had a Greek population and was called Scythopolis. In 64 BCE it was taken by the Romans, rebuilt, and made the capital of the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Samaria that were centers of Greco-Roman culture.
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00724.jpg
  • Deir Rafat a Christian monastery in central Israel, located to the north-west of Beit Shemesh. Established 1927
    AH_monastery_03838.jpg
  • Deir Rafat a Christian monastery in central Israel, located to the north-west of Beit Shemesh. Established 1927
    AH_monastery_03837.jpg
  • Deir Rafat a Christian monastery in central Israel, located to the north-west of Beit Shemesh. Established 1927
    AH_monastery_03826.jpg
  • Metzada is the site of ancient palaces and fortifications in Israel on top of an isolated rock cliff on the eastern edge of the Judean desert overlooking the Dead Sea. where Jewish zealot insurgents held out for three years against the Romans after the fall of Jerusalem in 70C.E. and then committed mass suicide to avoid capture. Metzada has remained a symbol of Jewish heroism.
    AH_b_MASADA7062_PSh.jpg
  • Monfort A Crusader castle in Western Galilee, Israel The ruins of the once splendid Montfort Crusader castle, are located on a precipitous rock crest, overlooking the Keziv river. The castle was constructed by Templar Crusader knights in the early 12th century. Short after completion the building was destroyed by Salah al Din after the defeat of the Crusaders at the Horns of Hittim on 3-4 July 1187.<br />
<br />
Five years later, the castle was re-conquered by the Crusaders, who restored it. In 1220, Montfort was sold to the Crusader Knights of the German Teutonic Order and gave it the name "Starkenberg" which means strong mountain
    ah_b_HA-MONFOR-552_PSh.jpg
  • Israel, Nazareth, Pilgrims at the Basilica of the Annunciation
    AH_Nazareth_00206.jpg
  • Israel, Massada The Northern Palace
    AH_f_Masada_2019.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean Roman theatre dating from the first century CE. During the Hellenistic period Bet Shean had a Greek population and was called Scythopolis. In 64 BCE it was taken by the Romans, rebuilt, and made the capital of the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Samaria that were centers of Greco-Roman culture. The city contains the best preserved Roman theater of ancient Samaria as well as a hippodrome, cardo, and other trademarks of the Roman influence. Excavations at the cite are ongoing and reveal no less than 18 successive ancient towns
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00715.jpg
  • Deir Rafat a Christian monastery in central Israel, located to the north-west of Beit Shemesh. Established 1927
    AH_monastery_03824.jpg
  • Israel, Jerusalem, The City of David (Ir David‎) is claimed to be the oldest settled neighborhood of Jerusalem and a major archaeological site due to recognition as biblical Jerusalem
    AH_Jerusalem_2334.jpg
  • Israel, Caesarea, a town built by Herod the Great about 25 - 13 BC,
    AH_Caesarea_03512.jpg
  • Church of St. George, Lod, Israel
    AH_Ramla_1158.jpg
  • Eshkol National Park (Habasor National Park), Negev, Israel
    AH_Eshkol-National-Park_00551.jpg
  • Ramon Crater, Negev, Haminsara (the Carpentry) Hill,  square rock formations that resemble cut wooden planks. Hence the name
    AH_f_Ramon-crater_2239.jpg
  • Ramon Crater, Negev, Haminsara (the Carpentry) Hill,  square rock formations that resemble cut wooden planks. Hence the name
    AH_f_Ramon-crater_2234.jpg
  • Israel, Nazareth, Basilica of the Annunciation, Stained glass window in the lower level with a silhouette of a cross in the foreground
    AH_f_Nazareth_05558.jpg
  • Israel, Masada, The fortifications and walls around the Metzada fortress, Metzada is the site of ancient palaces and fortifications in Israel on top of an isolated rock cliff on the eastern edge of the Judean desert overlooking the Dead Sea. where Jewish zealot insurgents held out for three years against the Romans after the fall of Jerusalem in 70C.E. and then committed mass suicide to avoid capture. Metzada has remained a symbol of Jewish heroism.
    AH_f_Masada_2013_1.jpg
  • St. Nilos church (Eastern Church) in Mamshit from the 4th century CE. Mamshit is the Nabatean city of Memphis. In the Nabatean period, Mamshit was important because it sat on the route from the Idumean Mountains to the Arava, continued on to Beersheva or to Hebron and Jerusalem. The city covers ten acres and is the smallest but best restored city in the Negev Desert.
    AH_f_Mamshit_2370_1.jpg
  • Fireworks display photographed in Natanya, Israel
    AH_Fireworks_3252.jpg
  • Zikhron Ya'akov, Israel, The historic street, now a pedestrian street, Zihron Yaaqov; also Zichron Yaakov (meaning Jacob's memorial) was established 1882 on Mount Carmel, by pioneers from Romania, members of Hovevei Zion movement. In 1883 Baron Edmond James de Rothschild became the patron of the new settlement. The place was named in memory of his father, James (Jacob) Mayer de Rothschild. In 1885 Rothschild helped to establish the first winery in the country in Zikhron Ya'aqov.
    AH_Zikhron-Yaakov_21.jpg
  • Israel, Jerusalem Yad Vashem, the memorial to the Six Million Jews murdered during the holocaust in world war two. It is also a research and documentation center.
    AH_Yad-Vashem_2447.jpg
  • Monfort A Crusader castle in Western Galilee, Israel The ruins of the once splendid Montfort Crusader castle, are located on a precipitous rock crest, overlooking the Keziv river. The castle was constructed by Templar Crusader knights in the early 12th century. Short after completion the building was destroyed by Salah al Din after the defeat of the Crusaders at the Horns of Hittim on 3-4 July 1187.<br />
<br />
Five years later, the castle was re-conquered by the Crusaders, who restored it. In 1220, Montfort was sold to the Crusader Knights of the German Teutonic Order and gave it the name "Starkenberg" which means strong mountain
    ah_b_HA-MONFOR-567_PSh.jpg
  • The Franciscan “Terra Santa” Church and Monastery of  Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea, Ramla, Israel
    AH_Ramla_1147.jpg
  • Israel, Caesarea, The old harbour now a resort beach Originally built by Herod the Great in the first century CE
    AH_f_Caesarea_2409.jpg
  • Mount Gilboa observation point with a view of the Jezreel valley
    AH_Gilboa_00487.jpg
  • Roman ruins at Hamat Gader, Israel Hamat Gader is located in the Yarmuk Valley on the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee, about 20 kilometers from Tiberias. and has 4 springs one of sweet water and four of mineral water. other attractions are an archaeological site with reconstructed Roman baths, which are regarded as the most impressive in the world; an amphitheatre and a 5th century synagogue. There is also a crocodile farm
    ah_b_HAMAT-GADER-6520_PSh.jpg
  • Closeup of Jelly fish swimming in a large aquarium
    AH_f_Aquarium_01671.jpg
  • Israel, Bet Shean Roman theatre the scaenae frons an elaborate backdrop wall behind the stage, dating from the first century CE. During the Hellenistic period Bet Shean had a Greek population and was called Scythopolis. In 64 BCE it was taken by the Romans, rebuilt, and made the capital of the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Samaria that were centers of Greco-Roman culture.
    AH_f_Scythopolis_00707.jpg
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