Armageddon tired of hearing about the end of the world

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Mendalla

Happy headbanging ape!!
Pronouns
He/Him/His
Ha ha.

Now on to the serious stuff. I know you're thinking, "Why isn't this in the R&F forum?" Well, it's not about Armageddon in Christian religious beliefs, but about the city that the battle at the end of time takes its name from.

Armageddon comes from the Hebrew Har Megiddo, Hill of Megiddo. An accident of transliteration caused the loss of the "H", giving us "Armegiddo" or "Armageddon". Megiddo was a city in the Jezreel Valley, now in modern day Israel, inhabited continuous from the Neolithic through the Iron Age.

So why did the author of Revelation use this ancient city, already abandoned by his time, as the scene for the penultimate battle in the final conflict between good and evil? Well, Megiddo was a major crossroads of trade, diplomacy, and military activity for centuries in the BCE era. As a result, it was the scene of many battles including a famed 1457 BCE attack by the Egyptians under Pharoah Thutmose III that is regarded as the first documented battle in history. Author and professor Dr. Eric Cline, who worked in the archaeological digs at Megiddo for 20 years of his career, counted 19 battles at or near Megiddo just up to the time of Revelation and another 15 or so since. So it likely made perfect sense to place a key battle in prophecy there.

Anyhow, I listened to an episode of The Ancients today about Megiddo with Cline as the guest. It is another of those ancient sites with a very long and storied history that is reflected in its multiple layers of habitation. It dates to the Neolithic Period and was continuously inhabited through to the Persian period. Cline mentions that it was probably empty by the time Alexander passed through in the late 4th century BCE. At the time of Thutmose's attack, it was a Canaanite city-state. Later, it was part of the kingdom of Israel (both the early unified one and the Northern Kingdom of that name after the split between Israel and Judah) and 1 Kings mentions Solomon fortifying it though no archaeological evidence pointing to his involvement with the city has yet been found. Stables initially claimed to be the "Stables of Solomon" in fact have now been dated to later, probably the reign of Omri or Ahab. Of course, it became part of the Assyrian, Babylonian, and Persian empires as each conquered the region.

There's still lots to be found and learned about Megiddo and Israeli and other archaelogists keep digging and documenting their finds. Fascinating stuff. Here's a link to the show. Cline also has a couple books on Megiddo.


Links to the books on Amazon (so you can get the particulars). The first is about the city's ancient history, the second is a history of modern archaeology at Megiddo.


 
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One interesting modern story about Megiddo that Cline discusses: In WWI British general Edmund Allenby commanded British operations again the Turks in Palestine and surroundings (remember there was no Israel at that time). One of his victories was the Battle of Megiddo in September, 1918. Apparently, he used the exact same approach to Megiddo as Thutmose did in 1457BCE with the same result: he won. So studying history does have practical applications. :giggle:
 
After the Megiddo fiasco ... did time go on? Are we limited in our observation of time for reason?

Is it just to favor the possessives ... those that believe they owned everything initially before the end times ... thus secessionism ... often unsuccessful as empires have problems also ... there are many enigmas that mortals do not have unlimited access to ... they reside in the impossible ... said to be Psyche!

I am told Psyche is beyond our understanding because we are not very kind to delicate structures ... sheer brute forces!

Thus the idea of deep mars on the land as Wadi ...
 
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