Gush Hispin
Gush Hispin (Hebrew: גוש חיספין, lit. Hispin Bloc) is an area in the southern Golan Heights consisting of the Israeli settlements and agricultural cooperatives of Hispin, Nov, and Avnei Eitan.
Ḩātim is a town in Jordan.
Population: 5,542
Latitude: 32° 38' 42.68" N
Longitude: 35° 46' 37.99" E
Gush Hispin (Hebrew: גוש חיספין, lit. Hispin Bloc) is an area in the southern Golan Heights consisting of the Israeli settlements and agricultural cooperatives of Hispin, Nov, and Avnei Eitan.
Golani Interchange (Hebrew: מחלף גולני), known as Maskana Junction in Arabic, is a key road interchange in the Lower Galilee region of northern Israel, located east of Haifa and west of Tiberias, at the intersection of highways 65 and 77. The Golan…
Gesher is an archaeological site located on the southern bank of Nahal Tavor, near kibbutz Gesher in the central Jordan Valley of Israel. It bears signs of occupation from two periods, the very early Neolithic and the Middle Bronze Age. The site was…
Tel Ali is an archaeological site located one mile south of the Sea of Galilee, in the central Jordan Valley, Israel. It has been excavated twice. First, during the years 1955–1959, Moshe Prausnitz conducted salvage excavations on behalf of the Isra…
Romtha, Ramtha, Ramoth, Ar Ramtha, Al Romtha, Ermeith, Ramath, Ramtha'a are all names for the same region, a flat location 30 km north-east of Jordan River.
Mechinat Avnei Eitan (Hebrew: מכינת אבנ"י אית"ן), also referred to as Leadership Yeshiva Academy in English, is a pre-military mechina which combines classical Yeshiva learning with the preparation for the service in the Israeli Defence Forces and …
Ein Hoga (Hebrew: עין חוגה) is a spring situated 4 km (2 mi) north-east of Bet She'an, and to the east of the Kibbutz at Hamadia.
Abila (Ancient Greek: Ἄβιλα), Abila in the Decapolis (Abila Dekapoleos), and for a time, Seleucia (Ancient Greek: Σελεύκεια; also transliterated as Seleuceia, Seleukeia), was an ancient city in the Decapolis; the site, now referred to as Quwaylibah …