Batanaea

The tetrarchy of Philip (4 BCE - 34 AD), then kingdom of Herod Agrippa I (37 - 44 AD) and Herod Agrippa II (53 - 100 AD): Iturea, Trachonitis, Gaulanitis, Batanea and Auranitis

Batanaea or Batanea was an area often mentioned between the first century BC until the fourth century AD. It is often mixed with the biblical Bashan as its hellenized/latinized form (of Bashan) and as a part of the Biblical Holy Land, northeast of the Jordan River. According to old explorations, maps and research, the Batanea was much more a part between the two Trachones mentioned by Strabon. Many maps reveal that the Ard[dubiousdiscuss] of Batanea was at the east of the Leja region[1] (the common Herodian Trachonitis).

Bashan was, in biblical context, the whole region east of the Jordan, above Gadara and Abila until the Jebel el Druz, the old Hauran (Bashan) mountains.

  1. ^ Ptolomaios, Handbook of Geography, by Stückelberger, Grasshoff, see Mapsection, created together with Ptolemaios-Forschungsstelle Institut für Klassische Philologie, 2017, ISBN 3796521487

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