- Édouard
Naville and
Flinders Petrie were
looking for
Pithom along the Wadi
Tumilat, an
arable strip of land
serving as the
ancient transit route between Egypt...
- Wadi
Tumilat (Old
Egyptian Tjeku/Tscheku/Tju/Tschu) is the 50-kilometre-long (31 mi) dry
river valley (wadi) to the east of the Nile Delta. In prehistory...
-
leading into a dry
river valley east of the Nile
River Delta named Wadi
Tumilat. (In
ancient times, the Red Sea may have
reached northward to the Bitter...
- that the
Qedarites never ruled the
region of the Wādī
Ṭumīlāt, the
discovery in the Wādī
Ṭumīlāt region of
Qedarite remains, such as a
shrine to the goddess...
- control,
silting and
changing relief. One such
defunct distributary is Wadi
Tumilat.[citation needed] The Suez
Canal is east of the
delta and
enters the coastal...
-
dynasty capital Pi-Ramesses, and
Succoth with Tell el-Maskhuta in Wadi
Tumilat, the
biblical Land of Goshen. From Succoth, the
Israelites travel to Etham...
- its
modern counterpart, by
linking the Nile to the Red Sea via the Wadi
Tumilat. Work
began under the pharaohs.
According to
Darius the Great's Suez Inscriptions...
- Persian, Elamite,
Babylonian and
Egyptian on five
monuments erected in Wadi
Tumilat,
commemorating the
opening of the "Canal of the Pharaohs"
between the Nile...
- Helwan, Tell
Ibrahim Awad, Tell el-Farkha (Eastern Nile Delta), Wadi
Tumilat and as far
north as Tel Lod in the
Southern Levant. The
number of artifacts...
-
Temple of
Kerman The Suez
Inscriptions at the
Canal of the
Pharaohs in Wadi
Tumilat,
written by
Darius the
Great in Persian, Elamite, Akkadian, and Egyptian...