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Yohanan Aharoni (1919–1976)

Author of The Macmillan Bible Atlas

24 Works 1,409 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Yohanan Aharoni (1919-76) was Professor of Archaeology, Chairman of the Department of Archaeology and Near Eastern Studies, and Chairman of the Institute of Archaeology at Tel Aviv University.

Series

Works by Yohanan Aharoni

The Macmillan Bible Atlas (1968) 1,000 copies, 5 reviews
The Jewish People: An Illustrated History (2006) — Author — 15 copies
Historical Atlas of the Jewish People (2003) 10 copies, 1 review
Beer-Sheba (1973) 9 copies
Arad inscriptions (1981) 6 copies
Bibliai atlasz (1999) 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
יוחנן אהרוני
Birthdate
1919-06-07
Date of death
1976-02-10
Gender
male
Nationality
Israel
Places of residence
Tel Aviv, Israel
Associated Place (for map)
Tel Aviv, Israel

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
If you want to know anything about the location of the Jews from the time of Moses onward, this is the book.
The purpose of this atlas is to show, as far as possible through maps of each event, the changes and historical processes in the lands of the Bible. In the first part of the atlas, the Jewish people were located mainly in the small area of the Holy Land; by the time of the Bar Kokhba Revolt, however, a large part of the people were scattered among the nations. The focal point of the atlas is the Holy Land, and one of our aims was to place it within its proper relation to the surrounding show more lands most of which played an important part in its history. There are therefore, many maps showing the Holy Land as a part of the Ancient East or the Greco-Roman world as a whole. show less
NO OF PAGES: SUB CAT I: Reference SUB CAT II: SUB CAT III: DESCRIPTION: The purpose of this atlas is to show, as far as possible through maps of each event, the changes and historical processes in the lands of the Bible. In the first part of the atlas, the Jewish people were located mainly in the small area of the Holy Land; by the time of the Bar Kokhba Revolt, however, a large part of the people were scattered among the nations. The focal point of the atlas is the Holy Land, and one of our show more aims was to place it within its proper relation to the surrounding lands most of which played an important part in its history. There are therefore, many maps showing the Holy Land as a part of the Ancient East or the Greco-Roman world as a whole.NOTES: Donated by Rose DeRenzo. SUBTITLE: Revised Edition show less

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Statistics

Works
24
Members
1,409
Popularity
#18,235
Rating
4.0
Reviews
7
ISBNs
33
Languages
7

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