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  2. Mount Sinai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Sinai

    Mount Sinai travel guide from Wikivoyage; Caucasian Albanian Alphabet Discovered and Deciphered, Azerbaijan International, Vol. 11:3 (Autumn 2003). Six articles. View OF Mount Sinai (as opposed to the view FROM Mount Sinai) Archived 2020-10-10 at the Wayback Machine; Information about the town of St. Katherine and the Sinai mountains; A Report ...

  3. Wadi Maghareh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wadi_Maghareh

    Wadi Maghareh (also spelled Maghara or Magharah, meaning "The Valley of Caves" in Egyptian Arabic) is an archaeological site located in the southwestern Sinai Peninsula, Egypt. It contains pharaonic monuments and turquoise mines dating from the Old, Middle and New Kingdoms of Ancient Egypt.

  4. North Sinai Archaeological Sites Zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Sinai_Archaeological...

    The North Sinai Archaeological Sites Zone is composed of a collection of important ancient sites between the Suez Canal and Gaza along the Mediterranean coast of ...

  5. Jabal al-Lawz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jabal_al-Lawz

    Claims made by some writers, including Bob Cornuke, Ron Wyatt, and Lennart Möller, that Jabal Maqlā, possibly identified as Jabal al-Lawz, is the real biblical Mount Sinai have been rejected by such scholars as James Karl Hoffmeier (Professor of Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern History and Archaeology), who details what he calls Cornuke ...

  6. Hashem El Tarif - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hashem_El_Tarif

    The hypothesis that this mountain is the original Mount Sinai has faced criticism. [3] Some of the arguments against the proposal that Hashem El Tarif is Mount Sinai are as follows: There is no mention in history of Hashem El Tarif, nor any well-known local tradition pointing to it as Mount Sinai.

  7. Serabit el-Khadim proto-Sinaitic inscriptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serabit_el-Khadim_proto...

    All the inscriptions published between 1916 and 1936 were given identification numbers following those of Gardiner's initial 1916 publication. Gardiner's numbers 1–344 were objects from Sinai with unrelated Egyptian inscriptions, so the Proto-Sinaitic inscriptions numbering began at 345.

  8. Sinai (journal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinai_(journal)

    Sinai (Hebrew: סיני; Siynay) was a bi-annual journal for research in the fields of Torah and Jewish studies (much of its content based on Cairo Genizah research) and more. The magazine was published continuously, once every six months (despite the Hebrew name "Monthly") from 1937 to 2020, published by the Rav Kook Institute .

  9. Wadi Mukattab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wadi_Mukattab

    The Wadi Mukattab (Arabic for "Valley of Writing"), also known as the Valley of Inscriptions, is a wadi on Egypt's Sinai Peninsula near St Catherine's Monastery. It links the main road in the Wadi Feiran with the Wadi Maghareh's ancient turquoise mining area. [1] The wadi is named after its valley's many petroglyphs.