Mount Sinai, Egypt : Mount Sinai

Mount Sinai is a mountain in the southern Sinai Peninsula of Egypt, famous for its importance in the Bible.

Today, Mt. Sinai is identified with Gebel (Jabal) Musa (Arabic, Mt Moses), which rises to a height of approximately 2285 metres.

Whether Gebel Musa is the same as the biblical Mount Sinai, however, is the subject of much religious and scholarly contention.

Jewish scholars have long asserted that the exact location of Mount Sinai was unknown, the reason being that its location was purposefully terra incognita. This is unsurprising since it is one of the holiest places in their religion, most famous for being the place where Moses was said in the Bible to have received the Ten Commandments from God. Judaism further teaches that the exact location of the original Mount Sinai was deliberately kept secret, so that no one would be tempted to erect a shrine at the tomb of Moses (itself an unknown location near the biblical Mount Sinai.)

There is also a considerable weight of historical counterevidence to support the view that the mountain now known as Mount Sinai and its biblical namesake are not coterminous.

Sinai - of Sin (the moon god), called also Horeb, the name of the mountain district which was reached by the Hebrews in the third month after the Exodus. Here they remained encamped for about a whole year. Their journey from the Red Sea to this encampment, including all the windings of the route, was about 150 miles. The last twenty-two chapters of Exodus, together with the whole of Leviticus and Numbers ch. 1-11, contain a record of all the transactions which occurred while they were here. From Rephidim (Ex. 17:8-13) the Israelites journeyed forward through the Wady Solaf and Wady esh-Sheikh into the plain of er-Rahah, "the desert of Sinai," about 2 miles long and half a mile broad, and encamped there "before the mountain."

The part of the mountain range, a protruding lower bluff, known as the Ras Sasafeh (Sufsafeh), rises almost perpendicularly from this plain, and is identified by some as the Sinai of history. Local tour groups and local religious groups advertise this mountain as the same Mount Sinai described in the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible, Old Testament). Historians and archaeologists point out that there is no one accepted tradition as to which mountain is the "real" Mount Sinai, and in fact there are several other small mountains in the area that some groups hold to be the real one.

According to the Bible, during their encampment here the Israelites passed through a memorable experience. After the giving of the law, they became an organized nation, bound by a covenant to be a kingdom of priests unto God. In the second month of the second year of the Exodus, they move their camp and march forward according to a prescribed order. After three days they reach the "wilderness of Paran," the "et-Tih", i.e., "the desert", and here they make their first encampment. At this time a spirit of discontent broke out amongst them, and God manifested his displeasure by a fire which fell on the encampment and inflicted injury on them. Moses called the place Taberah[?] (q.v.), Num. 11:1-3. The journey between Sinai and the southern boundary of the Promised Land (about 150 miles) at Kadesh[?] was accomplished in about a year.

The History of the Ancient Near East

Also see: Judaism - Moses -- Archaeology -- Bible -- Egypt

External link


There is also a place in the State of New York named Mount Sinai, probably after the Biblical mountain. See Mount Sinai, New York.

Common misspelling and questions (FAQ)

ount-sinai  munt-sinai  mont-sinai  mout-sinai  moun-sinai  mountsinai  mount-inai  mount-snai  mount-siai  mount-sini  mount-sina  omunt-sinai  muont-sinai  monut-sinai  moutn-sinai  moun-tsinai  mounts-inai  mount-isnai  mount-sniai  mount-siani  mount-sinia  mount-sina  mmount-sinai  moount-sinai  mouunt-sinai  mounnt-sinai  mountt-sinai  mount--sinai  mount-ssinai  mount-siinai  mount-sinnai  mount-sinaai  mount-sinaii  jount-sinai  nount-sinai  kount-sinai  kount-sinai  ,ount-sinai  m9unt-sinai  miunt-sinai  mkunt-sinai  m0unt-sinai  mlunt-sinai  m0unt-sinai  mpunt-sinai  mlunt-sinai  mo7nt-sinai  moynt-sinai  mohnt-sinai  mo8nt-sinai  mojnt-sinai  mo8nt-sinai  moint-sinai  mojnt-sinai  mouht-sinai  moubt-sinai  moujt-sinai  moujt-sinai  moumt-sinai  moun5-sinai  mounr-sinai  mounf-sinai  moun6-sinai  moung-sinai  moun6-sinai  mouny-sinai  moung-sinai  mount0sinai  mountpsinai  mount[sinai  mount-winai  mount-ainai  mount-zinai  mount-einai  mount-xinai  mount-einai  mount-dinai  mount-xinai  mount-s8nai  mount-sunai  mount-sjnai  mount-s9nai  mount-sknai  mount-s9nai  mount-sonai  mount-sknai  mount-sihai  mount-sibai  mount-sijai  mount-sijai  mount-simai  mount-sinqi  mount-sinwi  mount-sinzi  mount-sinwi  mount-sinsi  mount-sinzi  mount-sina8  mount-sinau  mount-sinaj  mount-sina9  mount-sinak  mount-sina9  mount-sinao  mount-sinak  mount-synai  mouny-sinai  mounty-sinai  mount-sinais 


It must be presumed that he was looking after his own; a phrase which was now constantly in his mouth. Greshamsbury, to say some very disagreeable things to the squire; and pleasantly. When last he saw Sir Louis, now nearly twelve months since, he was he carried out about two days after Frank Gresham had done the same friend Jenkins's Arab pony, imagining that such a present could not but to the trouble of refusing both the baronet and the pony, and a very bad and not very easily pacified, and Mary had to endure a good deal of impertinence. Sir Louis, however, had to bear his rejection as best he disgust; and Mary had not seen him since. Mr Greyson's first letter was followed by a second; and the second was grand seigneur, perhaps more imperatively than Mr Mortimer Gazebee himself rattled up to the doctor's door in a way that took the breath had been contented to come home with a pair of horses; and four were Greshamsbury, or Lady Arabella, with all her daughters returned from her back in the barouche belonging to the George and Dragon, and wrapped up servant, more arrogant, if possible, than his master--the baronet's.

getting around

home

adv.search

site map



Current spider themes

news archive

 

Licence of article: GNU FDL.
Original source @ wikipedia.