Madaba Mosaic Map (500)
1 2021-06-21T15:33:56-04:00 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6 7 1 This map is from the second half of the 6th century and is considered to be one of the most important discovered artifacts from Western Asia and is one of the first pieces of evidence concerning ancient cartography. During construction of St. Georges Church in Madaba, Jordan, this map was discovered on the foundations of a Byzantine church. Only a quarter of the original mosaic was able to be preserved. The representation of Madaba was lost and was the most important part of the map which was directly in front of the pulpit of the Byzantine church, in line with Jerusalem. The original map displayed the area from Lebanon in the north to the Nile delta in the south, and from the Mediterranean Sea to the desert in the east. The Dead Sea and Jordan Valley form the central north-south axis. This mosaic was not necessarily used for traveling or typical map purposes, but was a complex work of Christian art with multiple layers of meaning. plain 2021-06-21T15:33:56-04:00 31.714876, 35.799258 500 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6Contents of this tag:
- 1 2021-06-21T15:33:49-04:00 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6 Primary Source Data Visualizations for World History and Geography 4 This page provides a list of primary source data visualizations to support inquiry in world history and geography. They are organized according to the periodization scheme in Michigan's social studies standards for world history. plain 2022-01-27T01:59:24-05:00 1150 BCE Tamara Shreiner 72eaa2d1ba1352b75b8a8da73e879a4ceb510ae0