Rama Rachelis
Rama Rachelis (ad pedem litterarum "mons Rachelis"), litteris Hebraicis רָמַת רָחֵל et Arabicis رمات راحيل, est collis inter Hierosolyma et Bethlehem super monumentum Rachelis eminens. Ibi anno 1926 colonia Iudaeorum condita est iuxta locum ubi aevo antiquo palatium imperii Achaemenidarum aedificatum erat.
Bibliographia
recensere- Yohanan Aharoni, "Excavations at Ramath Raḥel, 1954: Preliminary Report" in Israel Exploration Journal vol. 6 (1956) pp. 102-111, 137-157, tabulae 9-14, 21-27
- Gabriel Barkay, "Royal Palace, Royal Portrait?" in Biblical Archaeology Review vol. 32 (2006) pp. 34–44
- Yuval Gadot, "In the Valley of the King: Jerusalem's Rural Hinterland in the 8th-4th Centuries BCE" in Tel Aviv vol. 42 fasc. 1 (2015) pp. 3–26
- Dafna Langgut, Yuval Gadot, Naomi Porat, Oded Lipschits, "Fossil pollen reveals the secrets of the Royal Persian Garden at Ramat Rahel, Jerusalem" in Palynology vol. 37 (2013) pp. 115-129
- Oded Lipschits, Manfred Oeming, Yuval Gadot, Benjamin Arubas, "The 2006 and 2007 Excavation Seasons at Ramat Rahel: Preliminary Report" in Israel Exploration Journal vol. 59 (2009) pp. 1–20
Nexus externi
recensereVicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Ramam Rachelis spectant. |