Although this is heavily disputed, the areas most often disputed are The West Bank, Gaza Strip and the Golan Heights.
The West Bank was previously Transjordan, or sometimes referred to as Cisjordan. The Gaza Strip was captured in the 1967 Six Day War and remained Israeli when Egyptian officials did not want to take control over it as part of the 1979 Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty. The Golan Heights were captured from Syria during the same war.
Up to my knowledge they are only two. Gaza strip and the West Bank. Some people claim East Jerusalem to be a separate territory, but it is actually part of the West Bank.
I thought there were two, Gaza strip and the west Bank.
No country was occupied in full as a result of the Six Day War. The Egyptian Sinai was occupied by Israel, the Syrian Golan is still occupied by Israel, and areas previously controlled by Jordan and Egypt were also under Israeli occupation. These areas have been retroactively called Palestine, but as Palestine was not a country prior to the war, it cannot be considered an occupied country. (Those who consider the State of Palestine as the West Bank and Gaza, and believe that Israel is illegally occupying those areas militarily, still call Palestine a "disputed territory" since there was no Palestinian governmental apparatus in 1967.)
Israel is occupied by Israel, an independent sovereign country. Israel is occupied by all of its citizens such as the Druze, Muslim, Christian, Baha'i, atheist, agnostic and Jewish male and female citizens of Israel, both native-born and immigrant.
Since Israel became a country in 1948 it has never occupied Cairo, Egypt.
Syria lost territory to Israel in the 1967 War (the Golan Heights). It made no successful incursions into Israel from that point onwards. The Syrian Army did invade Lebanon in 1982 and occupied Lebanon until 2006.
The Golan Heights.
Israel
Palestinians who fled from the territories that Israel occupied.
George Dib has written: 'Israel's violation of human rights in the occupied territories' -- subject(s): Occupied territories, Israel-Arab War, 1967
No.
The Kingdom of Israel occupied the land on the Mediterranean Sea corresponding roughly to the State of Israel of modern times.
Abu Ubaida led the Muslim armies into the Levantine region, annexing to the Rightly-Guided Caliphate the areas occupied by the current nations of Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria.
This is true.