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REFERENCE LISTS1

FOR PUPILS

Advanced Geography. H. B. Niver.

Advanced Geography. R. E. Dodge.

Arabia, the Desert of the Sea. National Geographic Magazine.

Vol. 20, No. 12.

Asia. N. B. Allen.

Asia. F. G. Carpenter.

Asia. J. F. and A. H. Chamberlain.

Asia. F. D. and A. J. Herbertson.

Asia. E. E. Huntington.

Asia, the American Magazine of the Orient. Vol. 18, 19, and 20. Commerce and Industry. J. R. Smith.

Dawn of American History in Europe. W. L. Nida.

Essentials of Geography. Book II. A. P. Brigham and J. McFarlane.

How the World is Fed. F. G. Carpenter.

Man and His Work. F. D. and A. J. Herbertson.

New Geography. Book II. W. W. Atwood.

New Geography. Book II. R. S. Tarr and F. M. McMurry. Old Europe and Young America. W. H. Mace and E. P. Tanner. Ten Boys on the Way from Long Ago to Now. J. Andrews. Palestine and Its Transformation. E. E. Huntington.

FOR TEACHERS

Ancient Piedmont Route of Mesopotamia. The Geographical Review. Vol. 8, No. 3.

A Pilgrim in Palestine. J. Finley.

Between Massacres in Van. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 36, No. 2.

Cave Dwellers of Asia Minor. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 36, No. 4.

1 Books in this list may be obtained through your bookseller.

From Jerusalem to Aleppo. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 24, No. 1.

Geography of the Holy Land. G. A. Smith.

International Geography. H. R. Mill.

Lebanon of the Flourishing Cedars. Travel Magazine. Vol. 23, No. 5.

Mecca the Mystic. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 32, No. 2.

Peasant Life in the Holy Land. E. Grant.

Shiraz of the Persian Rug. Travel Magazine. Vol. 23, No. 5.
Syria, the Land Link of History's Chain. National Geographic
Magazine. Vol. 36, No. 5.

The Bagdad Railway. M. Jastrow.
The Cradle of Civilization.

Vol. 29, No. 2.

National Geographic Magazine.

The Geography of Medicines. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 32, No. 3.

The Isle of Frankincense. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 33, No. 3.

The Last Blood Sacrifice of the Samaritans. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 37, No. 1.

The Progressive World Struggle of the Jews for Civil Equality. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 36, No. 1.

The Real Palestine of Today. L. G. Leary.

The Rise of the New Arab Nation. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 36, No. 5.

The Spell of the Holy Land. A. Bell.

Under the Heel of the Turk. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 34, No. I.

Village Life in the Holy Land. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 25, No. 3.

Wanderings in Arabia. Charles M. Doughty.

Where Adam and Eve Lived. National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 26, No. 6.

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Amalekites (a měl'e kītes) Anatolia (ăn ā to li a) Assuan (äs u än' or a' swan)

Baalbek (bäl'běk or bāl běk') Bactrian (băk′tri ăn) Basra (bäs'rä) or Bassora (bäs sō'rä) Bedouin (běd'u în)

Beersheba (bē er'shē ba) Beirut (bā rōōt' or bē rūt') Bsherreh (be she'rah) Carchemish (kär'kë mish) Chaldea (kål de'a)

Cherith (ke'rith) or Wady Kelt (wä'dy kelt) Codex Sinaiticus (ko'dex si'nā it'ĭ cus)

GLOSSARY

Sultan of Turkey 1876-1909.
Seaport in Asia Minor.

Port in Arabia owned by British.
Greek writer of fables.

Head coil for Arabs.

A king of Persia.

Dwellers in villages in Arabia.

The one supreme being among the Mohammedans.

A nation dwelling in ancient Canaan. Western Asia Minor.

Location of noted dam on Nile River.

Noted city of ancient Syria.

Camel of the two-humped variety. Outlet for greatest date gardens of the world.

Nomadic Arabs of Syria, Arabia, or
North Africa.

Town in southern part of Palestine.
Largest city in Syria.

Village near cedar grove in Lebanon.

Capital of the ancient Hittite kingdom. Ancient kingdom of Southern Mesopotamia.

A brook in Palestine.

Manuscript edition of the New Testament found in the monastery on Mount Sinai.

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Emir Feisal (eʼmîr fēis'al· Arabian leader, son of King Hussein of

or feis'al).

Ephesus (ef'e sus)

Esdraelon (Armageddon

or Megiddo) (ěs dra
e'lon, ar mā gĕd'don,
me gid'do)

Fellaheen (fel la heēn')
Firan (fi rän')

Firozabadi (fi ro za bad'i)

Goofa (gōō'fa) or Kufa (kū'fa)

Haifa (hi'fa)

Haigians (häzh'ians) Halideh Hanoun (ha lid'

ĕh ha nōōn')

Haman (hãmắn)

Hammurabi (hām'mur ä'

- bi)

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Author of oldest code of laws known.

Haram (haʼram) or Harem Sacred place of Mohammedans. Pro

(ha'rem)

Haram esh Sherif (ha'

ram ĕsh sher ïf')

Haran (ha'ran)

Hazeroth (hǎz'rŏth)

hibited to all but them.

Mosque of Omar in Jerusalem.

Ancient capital of Assyria.

Oasis in Sinai Peninsula.

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