![]() ![]() Contact me (email address below) if you find any. The raw version contains a number of notes and other miscellania. The older, 2007 version of this data is two files: a tab-delimited raw version and a somewhat more useful merged version. The images come in a variety of open licenses. Some data is from OpenStreetMap, which has its own open license. The dataset as a whole is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license, meaning that you can use them for any purpose you want as long as you credit. Can I Use These Files?Ībsolutely! That’s why they’re here. I graduated from Wheaton College, Illinois (2000), where I took a class that involved some Bible geography (in addition to traveling to many of the places listed), as well as a number of geology courses, but that’s it. I don’t have any special qualifications, only a lot of free time. ![]() For example, Abdon has over 20 sources attesting to its location. The sources for individual locations appear on their respective pages. Read a high-level overview of this project. This project (1) comprehensively identifies the possible modern locations of every place mentioned in the Bible as precisely as possible, (2) expresses a data-backed confidence level in each identification, and (3) links to open data to fit into a broader data ecosystem. Todd Bolen has done a fantastic job taking and collating photos. I recommend for professional-quality photos of places in the Holy Land. For example: see Beersheba, Megiddo, and Miletus. These hand-selected photos primarily come from Wikimedia Commons. They were published in 19 by the American and. They depict the north-western region of the fictional continent of Middle-earth. ' A Map of Middle-earth ' is the name of two colour posters by different artists, Barbara Remington and Pauline Baynes. Sorry!) PhotosĪbout 1,000 photos of places in the Bible. Pauline Baynes 's 'iconic' 1 1970 poster-map of Middle-earth. Overlays for Google Earth let you see how maps of ancient and modern Jerusalem fit satellite imagery.ĭownload a KML with outlines of the most of the bodies of water in the Bible. The atlas lists all the places alphabetically, complete with thumbnails, verses, and photos (when available). ![]() Use Google Earth to open KML and KMZ files. ![]()
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