Domain and Website Information:
edom.it
Domain name - edom.it
Site title - www.edom.it
Go to website - www.edom.it
Site GEO location
Location Country - Italy
City/Town - Arezzo
Provider - Aruba S.p.A.
Site Logo
IP address:
Domain name servers:
dns4.arubadns.cz dns2.technorail.com dns.technorail.com dns3.arubadns.net
All records:
☆ edom.it. 3600 IN TXT "v=spf1 include:_spf.aruba.it ~all"
☆ edom.it. 3600 IN A 31.11.35.123
☆ edom.it. 3600 IN MX 10 mx.edom.it.
☆ edom.it. 3600 IN NS dns3.arubadns.net.
☆ edom.it. 3600 IN NS dns2.technorail.com.
☆ edom.it. 3600 IN NS dns.technorail.com.
☆ edom.it. 3600 IN NS dns4.arubadns.cz.
☆ edom.it. 3600 IN SOA dns.technorail.com. hostmaster.technorail.com. 1 86400 7200 2592000 3600
Brief facts about edom:
Edom was an ancient kingdom in Transjordan, located between Moab to the northeast, the Arabah to the west, and the Arabian Desert to the south and east. Most of its former territory is now divided between present-day southern Jordan and Israel. Edom appears in written sources relating to the late Bronze Age and to the Iron Age in the Levant. Edomites are related in several ancient sources including the list of the Egyptian pharaoh Seti I from c. 1215 BC as well as in the chronicle of a campaign by Ramesses III, and the Tanakh. Archaeological investigation has shown that the nation flourished between the 13th and the 8th centuries BC and was destroyed after a period of decline in the 6th century BC by the Babylonians.
Edomite language - Edomite was a Northwest Semitic Canaanite language, very similar to Biblical Hebrew, Ekronite, Ammonite, Phoenician, Amorite and Sutean, spoken by the Edomites in southwestern Jordan and parts of Israel in the 2nd and 1st millennium BCE. It is extinct and known only from an extremely small corpus...
Habiru - ʿApiru, also known in the Akkadian version Ḫabiru is a term used in 2nd-millennium BCE texts throughout the Fertile Crescent for a social status of people who were variously described as rebels, outlaws, raiders, mercenaries, bowmen, servants, slaves, and laborers.
Groups who converted to Judaism
States and territories disestablished in the 2nd century BC
States and territories established in the 13th century BC
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