Israels
the phonenicians
They both settled in the area today known as Lebanon, Israel, Syria, the Palestinian Territories, and Jordan.
Natural resources were not held in abundance by the ancient Hebrews. They settled in one of the least abundant areas of the world. They had the Jordan River and The Mediterranean Sea as resources. There was also fertile soil to the north. They're best resource was actually the Torah. It's not a cliché; the Torah drove them forward to do amazing things with one of the poorest areas on Earth.
The Jordan
Syria is bounded by the Mediterranean and Lebanon on the west, by Jordan on the south, by Iraq on the east and by Turkey on the north. The frontier between Syria and Turkey was settled by the Franco-Turkish agreement of 22 June 1929.xcool77
Between Iraq and the Mediterranean Sea there are a number of countries. Both Turkey and Syria border Iraq and the Mediterranean. Lebanon, Jordan, Israel, and Palestine are on the direct flight route from Iraq to the Mediterranean Sea.
Abraham possibly crossed the Jordan, but the Hebrews coming out of Egypt would have entered Israel through the South (the Jordan is on east Coast).Answer:Yes, the Israelites crossed the Jordan (Joshua ch.3-4).
Ethnic Jews, Hebrews, that is the descendants of Abraham, are Mediterranean. That is Abraham the progenitor of the Hebrew people was from a city in what is now southern Iraq, Ur. The people of this region are light to deeply olive complected, with dark, straight hair. The Hebrew people settled traditionally in what was once known as Cannaan, the reagion on both sides of the river Jordan, from just north of the Sea of Galilea to south of the Dead Sea. This is north of the African continent, east of the Mediterranean.
No. The only sea/gulf that Jordan borders is the Gulf of Aqabah.
No they are not
Israel.
Syria