Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In 2004, the Givot Olam Oil company discovered oil at the Meged 5 oil field near Rosh HaAyin. [8] [9] It is one of the largest on-shore oil fields in Israel. It began production in 2010, and produces oil as well as some natural gas. Its proven oil reserves are about 1,525 million barrels (242.5 × 10 ^ 6 m 3). [10] TTI Telecom is located in ...
The Yarkon/Auja was the northern boundary of the territory of the Philistines. [3] During the time of the Assyrian rule over the country, a fortress was built in a site known today as Tell Qudadi, on the northern bank of the river, next to its estuary.
Migdal Afek (Hebrew: מגדל אפק), also Migdal Tsedek (Tzedek, Zedek; Hebrew: מגדל צדק), is a national park on the southeastern edge of Rosh HaAyin, Israel. The ruins of a fortified manor house built by a sheikh during the 19th century, among which remains of the Crusader castle of Mirabel can be seen, are today known in Hebrew as ...
Yemenite Jews at a Tu Bishvat celebration, Ma'abarat Rosh HaAyin, 1950. During the British Mandate of Palestine, the total number of persons registered as immigrants from Yemen, between the years April 1939 – December 1945, was put at 4,554. [92] By 1947, there were an estimated 35,000 Yemenite Jews living in Mandate Palestine. [93]
Oranit (Hebrew: אֳרָנִית) is an Israeli settlement and local council located in the Seam Zone of the West Bank, abutting and crossing the Green Line.It is surrounded by Horshim forest to the west, Rosh HaAyin and Kfar Qasim to the southwest, Sha'arei Tikva to the east, and Khirbet Abu Salman to the northeast.
This page was last edited on 12 September 2020, at 19:44 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Batumi, Georgia; Birštonas, Lithuania; Bournemouth, England, United Kingdom; Changzhou, China; Como, Italy; Dortmund, Germany; Gelendzhik, Russia; Giessen, Germany ...
The new service between Tel Aviv and Rosh HaAyin opened on 3 June 2000. In 2003, this service was extended into Hod HaSharon via the Eastern Railway and the new Sharon Railway ; for this, a new connection between the Yarkon Railway and Eastern Railway was built, which avoided the reversal at Rosh HaAyin.