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Hazor (Extinct city) --- Megiddo (Extinct city) --- 902 <33 HAZOR> --- Archeologie--Oud-Palestina. Judea--HAZOR --- Armageddon (Extinct city) --- Hār Majīdū (Israel) --- Harmajidūn (Israel) --- Jabal Majīdū (Israel) --- Megiddo (Ancient city) --- Megido (Extinct city) --- Mutasallim, Tall al- (Israel) --- Mutasellim, Tell el- (Israel) --- Tall al-Mutasallim (Israel) --- Tel Megiddo (Israel) --- Tel Megido (Israel) --- Tell el-Mutesellim (Israel) --- Israel --- Ḥatsor (Extinct city) --- Hazor (Ancient city) --- Tell el-Qedaḥ (Israel) --- Tell Waqqâṣ (Israel) --- Antiquities --- 902 <33 HAZOR> Archeologie--Oud-Palestina. Judea--HAZOR
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Excavations (Archaeology) --- Hazor (Extinct city) --- Ḥatsor (Extinct city) --- Hazor (Ancient city) --- Tell el-Qedaḥ (Israel) --- Tell Waqqâṣ (Israel) --- Israel --- Antiquities --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Israel.
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Excavations (Archaeology) --- Bible --- Antiquities --- Israel --- Hazor (Extinct city) --- Ḥatsor (Extinct city) --- Hazor (Ancient city) --- Tell el-Qedaḥ (Israel) --- Tell Waqqâṣ (Israel) --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Israel --- Israel - Antiquities
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Excavations (Archaeology) --- -Israel --- Hazor (Extinct city) --- Israel --- Ḥatsor (Extinct city) --- Hazor (Ancient city) --- Tell el-Qedaḥ (Israel) --- Tell Waqqâṣ (Israel) --- Antiquities. --- Antiquities --- Israel.
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Hazor, Tel, Israel --- Gezer (Israel) --- Megiddo (Extinct city) --- Megiddo (Ville ancienne) --- Antiquities.
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"This work addresses the question of the Egyptian Hegemony during the 13th century BCE: its nature and its cultural processes, and the analysis of the Egyptian-style pottery in three Canaanite City-States is used to provide the proofs of the Egyptian presence there. The author has chosen the archaeological sites of Hazor, Megiddo and Lachish for a case study. Situated in three different regions of Southern Canaan, these three cities are known to be powerful and rich during the 13th century BCE. The Egyptian pottery of these sites has been identified and classified in a typology with numerous parallels to the Egyptian contemporaneous sites. A fabric analysis has been made from description of a fresh break section taken from each sample studied and, in a few cases completed by a petrographic analysis. All the data are gathered in an electronic database and can be consulted for further studies about this corpus. From the interpretation of the corpus, the author presents a spatial analysis of the Egyptian-Style pottery for each identified building in each site in order to shed light on an Egyptian presence at these cities and to qualify this presence."--Publisher's web site.
Pottery, Egyptian --- Bronze age --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Céramique égyptienne --- Age du bronze --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Hazor (Extinct city) --- Megiddo (Extinct city) --- Lachish (Israel) --- Hazor (Ville ancienne) --- Megiddo (Ville ancienne) --- Lakish (Israël) --- Antiquities. --- Antiquités --- Céramique égyptienne --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Ḥaẓor (Ville ancienne) --- Lakish (Israël) --- Antiquités
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This text attempts to account for the destruction of key cities in the Mediterranean at the end of the Bronze Age, circa the 12th century BC. The author proposes a military explanation for the destruction of four important kingdoms at this time.
Bronze age --- Chariot warfare --- Warfare, Prehistoric --- Weapons, Prehistoric --- Mediterranean Sea. --- Achaea: Bronze Age. --- Anatolia. --- Assur. --- Balkans. --- Beal, R. --- Canaan. --- Catling, H. --- Cyprus. --- David. --- Emar. --- Hatti. --- Hazor. --- Homer. --- Israel. --- Knossos. --- Libyans. --- Maspero, G. --- Merneptah. --- Meryre. --- North-Greek speakers. --- Nuzi. --- Papyrus Anastasi. --- Phrygians. --- Ramesses. --- Sardinia, Sardinians. --- Shekelesh. --- Thutmose III. --- Tursha. --- Ugarit. --- arrowheads. --- chariot warfare. --- fire. --- greaves. --- runners. --- sacking. --- shardana. --- spears.
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"In 1177 B.C., marauding groups known only as the "Sea Peoples" invaded Egypt. The pharaoh's army and navy managed to defeat them, but the victory so weakened Egypt that it soon slid into decline, as did most of the surrounding civilizations. After centuries of brilliance, the civilized world of the Bronze Age came to an abrupt and cataclysmic end. Kingdoms fell like dominoes over the course of just a few decades. No more Minoans or Mycenaeans. No more Trojans, Hittites, or Babylonians. The thriving economy and cultures of the late second millennium B.C., which had stretched from Greece to Egypt and Mesopotamia, suddenly ceased to exist, along with writing systems, technology, and monumental architecture. But the Sea Peoples alone could not have caused such widespread breakdown. How did it happen? In this major new account of the causes of this "First Dark Ages," Eric Cline tells the gripping story of how the end was brought about by multiple interconnected failures, ranging from invasion and revolt to earthquakes, drought, and the cutting of international trade routes. Bringing to life the vibrant multicultural world of these great civilizations, he draws a sweeping panorama of the empires and globalized peoples of the Late Bronze Age and shows that it was their very interdependence that hastened their dramatic collapse and ushered in a dark age that lasted centuries. A compelling combination of narrative and the latest scholarship, 1177 B.C. sheds new light on the complex ties that gave rise to, and ultimately destroyed, the flourishing civilizations of the Late Bronze Age-and that set the stage for the emergence of classical Greece"--
Sea Peoples. --- Bronze age --- Mediterranean Region --- Civilization. --- Civilization --- Ethnology --- Sea Peoples --- Adad-nirari I. --- Aegean civilizations. --- Akhenaten. --- Alaksandu. --- Alalakh. --- Alashiya. --- Amarna. --- Amenhotep III. --- Ammurapi. --- Amun. --- Amurru (god). --- Ancient Near East. --- Ancient history. --- Archaeology. --- Ashkelon. --- Assyria. --- Babylonia. --- Bronze Age. --- Canaan. --- Carchemish. --- Carl Blegen. --- City-state. --- Clay tablet. --- Climate change. --- Deir el-Bahari. --- Disaster. --- Drought. --- Eastern Mediterranean. --- Egyptians. --- Egyptology. --- Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt. --- Epigraphy. --- Famine. --- Geography of Greece. --- Great power. --- Greeks. --- Hatshepsut. --- Hattusa. --- Hazor. --- Hebrews. --- Heinrich Schliemann. --- Hittites. --- Hoard. --- Hurrians. --- Hyksos. --- Iron Age. --- Israelites. --- Kamose. --- Kassites. --- King of Egypt. --- Knossos. --- Kynos. --- Late Bronze Age collapse. --- Mediterranean Sea. --- Megadrought. --- Merneptah. --- Minoan civilization. --- Minoan eruption. --- Minoan pottery. --- Mitanni. --- Mortuary temple. --- Mycenae. --- Mycenaean Civilization. --- Mycenaean Greece. --- Narrative. --- Near East. --- Nefertiti. --- New Kingdom of Egypt. --- Nubia. --- Pharaoh. --- Philistines. --- Phoenicia. --- Pottery. --- Publication. --- Pylos. --- Qatna. --- Ramesses II. --- Suppiluliuma I. --- Suppiluliuma II. --- The Various. --- Thutmose I. --- Thutmose III. --- Tiryns. --- Trade route. --- Trojan War. --- Troy. --- Tudhaliya IV. --- Tudhaliya. --- Tukulti-Ninurta I. --- Tushratta. --- Tutankhamun. --- Ugarit. --- Warfare. --- Washukanni. --- Wilusa. --- Writing. --- Year. --- Yigael Yadin. --- Bronze age. --- Peuples de la Mer. --- To 476. --- Mediterranean Region. --- Méditerranée, Région de la --- History --- Civilisation. --- Histoire
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