Apparently, the site of the Palmyra edifices to BAAL have been in ruins for a very long time. Long before the wars, terrorists and vandals that have affected it in one way or another. Long before the ISIS explosions and land mines. They had at one point in history been partially restored using cement instead of the original stone.
I believe all the hype and even the “military” actions of late were just staged in order to gain public support for the United Nations effort to RESTORE the ancient Temples and the IDOLS that once stood there. They are also working to build public support for the 3D printed replica’s of the Arch of BAAL they had planned to erect in ove4 1,000 cities across the Earth. They originally planned for them to be full size, not just the few smaller replicas they ended up placing in very prominent, influential and spiritually strategic cities in 2016. They reduced it’s size from 20 meters (Over 65 feet) to 20 Feet.
I hope that you are beginning to recognize that all the archeology and restoration of historical structures, artifacts and statues is not about US. It is all about them. The ruling elite re-establishing the worship of THEIR Ancestors. It is about the resurgence of all the pagan religions. It is about returning humanity to their bondage to the fallen Angels and their progeny. Why do you think they HIDE everything from you? All the evidence of anything that contradicts their narrative is locked away in places like the Vatican, the Smithsonian, and the Antiquities Departments of every Nation?
Don’t you realize that all those nations that have risen and fallen, all the history you have to dig up was buried for a reason? The rise and fall of Nations is God’s to command. When I say GOD or LORD, I am talking about Yahuwah, the CREATOR, the GOD of the BIBLE and/or His Son Yahushuah.
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FORCED RESURRECTION of PALMYRA
They are working very hard worldwide to endear this satanic city to your hearts. Here you will find some notes that might help you get an idea of the TRUTH about this place. You do not want to be any part of the RESURRECTION of this ANCIENT City. You should not be connected with the … Click Here to Read More
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Should we really RESURRECT PALMYRA?
The United Nations wants to paint Palmyra as nothing but the finest of all the world has to offer. Like it was some kind of majestic oasis of unity and luxury. They tell you it is too valuable of a historic culture to be lost. They tell you by resurrecting Palmyra you are fighting terrorism … Click Here to Read More
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Palmyra: A City Rising Above the Mist

“Palmyra is a strange ruin. It is not haunted by saints or warriors, but by merchants. Its history is one of trade.”
H.V. Morton, Through Lands of the Bible, 1938
Introduction:
Syria never embraced mass tourism like its neighbors Israel, Jordan Turkey, or Egypt. In fact, under the rule of Bashar al Assad’s father, Hafez al Assad, Syria was never vigorously promoted as a tourist destination. It was difficult as well as costly to get a tourist visa. When Bashar came to power, after his father’s death in 2000, the country slowly began to open up. Tour operators were excited about the young Bashar taking the helm and hoped for a Syrian renaissance of sorts. Luxury hotels were built, infrastructure around tourist sites was improved, and independent tour agencies were allowed to operate separately from the National Tourist Agency. Even with all the upgrades, Syria still had a difficult time breaking into the international tourist market, remaining largely off the beaten track.
For the individual who wanted to experience the beauty of a country without the hassle of tour busses, hawkers, and the crowds, no country in the region was more magical than Syria. Before the civil war, I can’t recall how many times I would be wandering through an archeological site and suddenly realize that I was the only person among the ruins.
Palmyra, situated in the middle of the desert between Damascus and the Euphrates River, is the site of the most treasured shrines including the Temple of Baal, the Temple of Baalshmin and the Monumental Arch.
| BEL The name Bel comes from the Akkadian bēlu meaning “lord” or “master”. It is a title, and an epithet applied to many Gods who may be identified as “Lord” including Enlil, Marduk and Malak. The Feminine form is Belit. Bel seems to be cognate with Ba’al.The Greek form of Bel is Belos which has been applied to Zeus and the Latin Belus, which has been applied to Jupiter. Also, the names Bel and Belanos are often used interchangeably among modern Pagans.Bol is identified as the sky God and King of the Gods of ancient Palmyra and Syria with the eagle and lightning bolts as his symbols. His companions were Yarhibol and Aglibol. He was identified with Bel-Marduk and came to be called Bel, which is probably cognate anyway. Source |
| Baalshamin: The Fertility and Rain God
Baalshamin, the ancient Middle Eastern deity, played a significant role in Canaanite mythology as the universal god of fertility. They looked to him for favorable weather conditions, timely rain, and fertile soil, all of which were imperative for successful agricultural endeavors. Legends tell of Baalshamin’s battles against Mot, the god of death, where victory ensured seven years of fertility, while defeat resulted in drought and famine. Baalshamin’s prominence extended to Palmyra, |
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BAAL – BEL – BELL – HELLS BELLSJesus says Beelzebub is Lucifer. (Luke 11:17-22) ‘Baal’ has different pronunciations in different places. So, you will see Baal, Bel in Babylon, and Beel in the land of the Philistines – Canaan. Beelzebub was a Philistine god, that the Jews hated. It means Baal Master, or lord of the flies. A rose by any other … Click Here to Read More |
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In the following Photorientalist exhibitions you will see the first looks at Palmyra from the middle of the 19th century up to the 1960s, and features both professional and amateur photographers who visited the site. The second exhibitions looks at the work of Luigi Stironi, an Italian photographer who worked from the beginning of the French mandate following WWI in the 1920s.
The exhibition consists of glass lanternslides, albumen prints, stereoviews, large silver gelatin prints, postcards, and 35mm slides.
Photorientalist
A website dedicated to exhibiting 19th and 20th century photographs of the Middle East and North Africa




Battle of Palmyra (1941)
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Combatants: Vichy France, Emirate of Transjordan
The Battle of Palmyra (1 July 1941) was part of the Allied invasion of Syria during the Syria–Lebanon campaign in World War II. British mechanized cavalry and an Arab Legion desert patrol broke up a Vichy French mobile column northeast of the city of Palmyra. They captured four officers and 60 men, which provoked the surrender of the Vichy garrison at Palmyra. No mention whatsoever of any damage to the historical sites.
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PALMYRA PHOTOS FROM 1980

Syria – Palmyra. Ancient Palmyra. UNESCO World Heritage List, 1980
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| TEMPLE OF TRIUMPH | TEMPLE OF TRIUMPH | Syria: ISIS Destroys Arch of Triumph in Ancient Palmyra | Time |
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| History — Triumphal Arch of Palmyra
cityhallarch.org
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Replica of the Palmyra Arch created by Digital Archeology and erected in London, New York, Dubai, Florence, Bern, and Washington DC how tall was it?
Answer: 20 feet tall The replica of the Palmyra Arch, which is two-thirds the size of the original, stands 20 feet tall. This replica was created using 3D printing technology and is located in New York City, London, and Washington DC. Digital Archeology replica of the Palmyra Arch is how tall?
Answer: 25 feet tall
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Arch of BAAL/Arch of Triumph/Arch of Hadrian One of the most recognizable structures in the ancient city of Palmyra (تدمر) is the remarkable monumental arch (قوس النصر). Also known as the triumphal arch or victory arch, it was constructed during the reign of Emperor Septimius Severus, who ruled from 193 to 211. Despite being built more than a half century after Hadrian’s visit to the city, the monument is often erroneously referred to as Hadrian’s arch. It was restored in the 1930s. The arch is particularly impressive from an architectural standpoint, addressing a problem somewhat unique to Palmyra (تدمر). The layout of this ancient city was unusual for the Roman period, as its main streets did not align with the four cardinal points of the compass. The monumental arch (قوس النصر) was constructed at the point of a thirty-degree turn in the main colonnade between the tetrapylon (التترابيل) and the Temple of Bel (معبد بل). To solve this problem, the arch incorporated two façades angled apart from one another. Only one of the original arched façades survive, but the overall design is still easy to appreciate. The arch is richly decorated with stone carvings, one of the most lavishly adorned monuments in the city. Source |
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The ancient city of Palmyra in Syria was a merchant city that was established in the Bronze Age and gained a lot of wealth from trade. The city’s wealth enabled it to construct monumental buildings such as the Temple of Bel (Baal) and the Great Colonnade, of which the impressive features are still visible in the landscape today. Unfortunately, some of the remnants of buildings were damaged during the Syrian civil war, but luckily most of it still remains standing. Excavations at Palmyra started in 1902, led by Otto Puchstein. Theodor Wiechand, and associate of Puchstein, resumed excavations in 1917 during the First World War. In 1929 Henri Arnold Seyrig, who was the general director of antiquities for the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon, started excavating at the site. During the Second World War excavations came to a stop, as the area became part of the conflict. On the first of July in 1941 the Battle of Palmyra took place during an allied invasion. Only after Syria’s independence in 1946, did archaeological excavations start up again slowly. An expedition organised by the Swiss UNESCO excavated the site from 1954 until 1956. Polish excavations, led by Kazimierz Michalowski, started in 1959. This was continued in 1980 by Michal Gawlikowski. The Syrian Directorate-General of Antiquities started excavating the site in 1958 in collaboration with the Polish. In 2011 excavations at the site ceased due to the Syrian Civil War. In 1980, Palmyra was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Some of the pictures from the Schultz collection show features that were destroyed in the Syrian Civil War, such as the Arch of Septimus Severus, the interior of the Temple of Bel and the Tomb of the Three Brothers. The Schultz pictures of Palmyra have not been dated. The pictures in the collection that were dated were taken in the late sixties to the early seventies, which indicate the Palmyra pictures could possibly have been taken during that time period. |
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Palmyra’s Arch of Triumph is Rising Up
By Betsy Wise
Published January 9, 2023 / Updated November 1, 2023



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PALMYRA, Syria (AP) — At the height of the Islamic State group’s rampage across Syria, the world watched in horror as the militants blew up an iconic arch and temple in the country’s famed Roman ruins in Palmyra.
Eight years later, IS has lost its hold but restoration work on the site has been held up by security issues, leftover IS land mines and lack of funding.
Other archaeological sites throughout Syria face similar problems, both in areas held by the government and by the opposition. They were damaged by the war or, more recently, by the deadly 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck a wide area of neighboring Turkey and also Syria in February.
Youssef Kanjou, a former director of Syria’s Aleppo National Museum, said the situation of heritage sites in his country is a “disaster.”
Without a coordinated preservation and restoration effort, said Kanjou, now a researcher at Tübingen University in Germany, “We will lose what was not destroyed by the war or the earthquake.”
Before the war, Palmyra — one of Syria’s six UNESCO world heritage sites — was the country’s archaeological crown jewel, a tourist attraction that drew tens of thousands of visitors each year. The ancient city was the capital of an Arab client state of the Roman Empire that briefly rebelled and carved out its own kingdom in the third century, led by Queen Zenobia.
In more recent times, the area had darker associations. It was home to the Tadmur prison, where thousands of opponents of the Assad family’s rule in Syria were reportedly tortured. IS demolished the prison after capturing the town.
The militants later destroyed Palmyra’s historic temples of Bel and Baalshamin and the Arch of Triumph, viewing them as monuments to idolatry, and beheaded an elderly antiquities scholar who had dedicated his life to overseeing the ruins.
Today, the road through the desert from Homs to Palmyra is dotted with Syrian army checkpoints. In the town adjacent to the ancient site, some shops have reopened, but signs of war remain in the form of charred vehicles and burned-out or boarded-up stores and houses.
The Palmyra Museum is closed, and the much-loved lion statue that used to stand in front of it has been moved to Damascus for restoration and safekeeping.
Nevertheless, Syrian and foreign tourists have begun to trickle back.
“We thought it was impossible that foreigners would return to Palmyra,” said Qais Fathallah, who used to run a hotel there but fled to Homs when IS (aka ISIS) took over. Now he is back in Palmyra, operating a restaurant, where he said he serves tourists regularly.
On a recent day, a group of tourists from countries including the United Kingdom, Canada and China, and another, with Syrian university students, were wandering through the ruins.
Some of the Syrian tourists had visited in better days. For communication engineering student Fares Mardini, it was the first time.
“Now I’ve finally come, and I see so much destruction. It’s something really upsetting,” he said. “I hope it can be restored and return to what it was.”
In 2019, international experts convened by UNESCO, the United Nations’ cultural agency, said detailed studies would need to be done before starting major restorations.
Youmna Tabet, program specialist at the Arab states unit of UNESCO’s World Heritage Center, said restoration work often involves difficult choices, particularly if there isn’t enough original material for rebuilding.
“Is it worth it to rebuild it with very little authenticity or should we rather focus on having 3D documentation of how it was?” she said.
Missions to the site were held up at first by security issues, including land mines that had to be cleared. IS (aka ISIS) cells still occasionally carry out attacks in the area.
Money is also a problem.
“There is a big lack of funding so far, for all the sites in Syria,” Tabet said, noting that international donors have been wary of breaching sanctions on Syria, which have been imposed by the United States, the European Union and others.
U.S. sanctions exempt activities related to preservation and protection of cultural heritage sites, but sanctions-related obstacles remain, such as a ban on exporting U.S.-made items to Syria.
Russia, an ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government, has begun restoring Palmyra’s triumphal arch, the largest-scale project underway to date at the site.
“We have some funding from some friends in some places, but it is not sufficient in relation to the disaster that occurred,” said Mohammad Nazir Awad, director general of Syria’s department of Antiquities and Museums.
It doesn’t have to be this way, said Maamoun Abdulkarim, who headed the antiquities department at the time of the IS (aka ISIS) incursion. Abdulkarim pointed to the international push to recover damaged heritage sites in the city of Mosul in neighboring Iraq, also controlled by the militants for some time, as an example of a successful restoration.
“We need to make some separation between political affairs and cultural heritage affairs,” said Abdulkarim, now a professor at the University of Sharjah. He warned that damaged structures are in danger of deteriorating further or collapsing as the rehabilitation work is delayed.
The deadly Feb. 6 earthquake caused further destruction at some sites already damaged by the war. This includes the old city of Aleppo, which is under the control of the government, and the Byzantine-era church of Saint Simeon in the Aleppo countryside, in an area controlled by Turkish-backed opposition forces.
About one-fifth of the church was damaged in the earthquake, including the basilica arch, said Hassan al-Ismail, a researcher with Syrians for Heritage a non-governmental organization. He said the earthquake compounded earlier damage caused by bombings and vandalism.
The group tried to stabilize the structure with wooden and metal supports and to preserve the stones that fell from it for later use in restoration.
Ayman al-Nabo, head of antiquities in the opposition-held city of Idlib, appealed for international assistance in stabilizing and restoring sites damaged by the earthquake.
Antiquities should be seen as “neutral to the political reality,” he said. “This is global human heritage, which belongs to the whole world, not just the Syrians.” Sorry, it doesn’t belong to my world. I am not a pagan. And we have just as many problems here in our own country. Who is going to help Americans? Everybody hates us, when we have done so much already to help so many countries.
Sewell reported from Beirut. Associated Press reporters Omar Sanadiki in Palmyra, Syria, and Omar Albam in Deir Semaan, Syria, contributed to this report.
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