None; there was no "Palestine" prior to World War 1. Before the Great War, the area now sometimes called "Palestine" was part of Turkey, and had been for hundreds of years. Turkey was allied with the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and after WWI ended, the British and French partitioned Turkey into several separate colonies including Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. "Palestine" was the name given to the area that now includes Israel and Jordan.
After WWII, the United Nations partitioned "Palestine" into "Israel" and "Trans-Jordan", or the "land across the Jordan River".
Lots of Jews had fled to Palestine before the holocaust, as there were very few another countries that would accept refugees, even under the obvious threat of genoicde.
outstanding beuty hitorical significance cultural/religious values
A world heritage site is a place listed by UNESCO as having special cultural or physical significance.
A world heritage site is a place listed by UNESCO as having special cultural or physical significance.
The Pont du Gard is a World Heritage site. It is the tallest Roman aqueduct, and one of the greatest examples of Roman engineering. It certainly has significance.
A World Heritage Site is a place that is listed by United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization as of special cultural significance. Examples would be things such as a forest, mountain, lake, island, desert, monument, building, complex, or city.
uh, no. this is mostly because palestine is not a country.(another guy)no!!palestine IS acountry
A:Wayne T. Pitard (The Oxford History of the Biblical World, Before Israel) says that during the second millennium BCE, Canaan was the name often used for Palestine (the area west of the Jordan River), whose northern boundary fluctuated between southern and central Lebanon. However, modern scholars generally use the term in referring to the wider region in Syria-Palestine where a substantial cultural continuum defined as Canaanite can be discerned. Encompassing western Palestine, most of Lebanon, and coastal Syria as far north as Ugarit, this more extensive area was never considered a political or cultural unit by its ancient inhabitants.
Literary significance refers to the importance and impact of a work of literature on its readers and on the literary world as a whole. It can be based on themes explored, the creativity of the storytelling, the cultural or historical context, or the influence the work has had on other literary works or society.
Cora Pucci is known for writing the book "Coffee: Cultural Brands and Traditions," which explores the cultural significance of coffee around the world.
Throughout history, there have been religious rituals and cultural significance to piercing one's body. The reasons span different cultures and parts of the world.
Palestine. Before that it was called Judea, and before that it was Israel. Its first name was Canaan. If the question seeks to ask specifically before World War 1, Palestine was the term used for the general region of the southern Levant under Ottoman Turkish Occupation. The territory was administrated as part of three different wilayaat or governates: the Wilayat Beirut (which consisted of much of Lebanon and northern Israel/Palestine), Mutasaffirat al-Qods (which consisted of Jerusalem and the surrounding area in central Israel/Palestine), and Wilayat Dimashq (which consisted of much of Syria, Jordan, and the southern Negev Desert in Israel). The Palestinian Arabs had little to no power in the administration or politics of any of the three wilayaat, which were ruled entirely by Turkish nobility in Beirut, Damascus, and Istanbul.