
Mosaics on the floor of the ancient church at Mt. Nebo, where Moses is thought to have looked outward to the land of Canaan.
Moses would never make the trip to the Promised Land, the Bible tells us, but he was buried on that very mountain ridge. Thousands of years later, apparently sometime between 350 and 380 C.E., early Christians built a church and monastery on the mount where the patriarch was supposed to have gazed westward. And pilgrims began to arrive.
The question is who exactly those pilgrims visiting between the third and eighth centuries were. Where did they come from? What were they like?















Comment: There's evidence that there were connections even further afield and earlier than that stated above: Beads found in Nordic grave reveal trade connections with Egypt 3,400 years ago
See also:
- Celestial Intentions: Comets and the Horns of Moses
- Judaism and Christianity - Two Thousand Years of Lies - 60 Years of State Terrorism
- Ancient DNA sets the record straight on the Canaanites
- History textbooks contain 700 years of false, fictional and fabricated narratives
- Senior Israeli archaeologist casts doubt on Jewish heritage of Jerusalem
- UK - Israel hides colonization policy with fake archaeological digs
And check out SOTT radio's: