- In archaeology, a tell (from Arabic: تَلّ, tall, 'mound' or 'small hill') is an
artificial topographical feature, a
mound consisting of the ac****ulated...
- The
Tulul adh-Dhahab (Arabic: تلول الذهب; lit. "the
hills of gold") is an
archaeological site in Jordan. The site
features two
neighboring tells, separated...
-
Tulul al-Baqarat or
Tulūl al-Baqarāt, is an
ancient Near East
archaeological site in
Wasit Governorate of Iraq
about 180
kilometers southeast of modern...
-
Dirat al-
Tulul (Arabic: ديرة التلول, romanized: Dirat at
Tulūl, lit. 'Land of Hills'), and
called locally in
Levantine Arabic Diret el Tlūl, is a lava...
-
Warren in 1868.
Ernst Sellin and Carl
Watzinger excavated Tell es-Sultan and
Tulul Abu el-'Alayiq
between 1907 and 1909, and in 1911, and John
Garstang excavated...
- As-Safa (Arabic: الصفا, Aṣ-Ṣafā), also
known as
Tulul al-Safa (تلول الصفا,
Tulūl Eṣ-Ṣafā),
Arabic for Al-Safa hills, is a
hilly region which lies in southern...
- period,
which were
discovered in the
western plain of
Jericho valley, at
Tulul Abu el-'Alayiq, near the
place where the
Roman road
connecting Jericho with...
-
Tulul al-Humur (Arabic: تلول الحمر) is a
Syrian village located in
Salamiyah Subdistrict in
Salamiyah District, Hama.
According to the
Syria Central Bureau...
-
until 1970,
biblical scholars identified Penuel with the twin
peaks of
Tulul adh-Dhahab in modern-day Jordan.
Based on the
account given in Genesis,...
-
identified as Tell Y****ir (one of a
group of
tells called collectively Tulūl al-Fāj)
which thrived especially in the
Middle Bronze Age, ca. 2000 BC -...