Sunset over Palmyra.Palmyra's correct name is actually Tadmor,a Semitic word still in use and apparently meaning 'to protect'. The city is referred as Palmyra in Greco-Latin sources,probably because of the large number of date palms in the area. The first two centuries of the Christian era were the period of Palmyra's greatest prosperity.
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- Sunset over Palmyra.Palmyra's correct name is actually Tadmor,a Semitic word still in use and apparently meaning 'to protect'. The city is referred as Palmyra in Greco-Latin sources,probably because of the large number of date palms in the area. The first two centuries of the Christian era were the period of Palmyra's greatest prosperity.
- Columns with Mamluk era Fakhr al Din abn Ma ani Citadel visible in the background, Palmyra. Palmyras correct name is actually Tadmor, a Semitic word still in use and apparently meaning to protect.
- Columns,Palmyra.Palmyra's correct name is actually Tadmor,a Semitic word still in use and apparently meaning 'to protect'. The city is referred as Palmyra in Greco-Latin sources,probably because of the large number of date palms in the area. The first two centuries of the Christian era were the period of Palmyra's greatest prosperity.
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- Syria, Palmyra. Fallen columns and arches litter the ground across the site of Queen Zenobia's ancient city at Palmyra.
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