Part of the Southern Levant east of the Jordan River
Transjordan, also known as the East Bank or the Transjordanian Highlands, is the part of the Southern Levant east of the Jordan River, mostly contained in present-day Jordan.
Transjordan may refer to: Transjordan (region), an area to the east of the Jordan River Oultrejordain, a Crusader lordship (1118–1187), also called Transjordan
formal independence as the Kingdom of Transjordan in 1946. After the Ottoman defeat in World War I, the Transjordanregion was administered within OETA East;
The Interregnum (between rulers) period in Transjordan was a short period during which Transjordan had no established ruler or occupying power that lasted
and partly undefined region to the east of the Jordan River, and was centered on the castles of Montreal and Kerak. Transjordan extended southwards through
Transjordan (Hebrew: עבר הירדן, Ever HaYarden) is an area of land in the Southern Levant lying east of the Jordan River valley. It is also alternatively
Amathus (Ancient Greek: Ἀμαθοῦς or τὰ Ἀμαθά; in Eusebius, Ἀμμαθοὺς. Hebrew: עמתו was a fortified city east of the Jordan River, in modern-day Jordan. Its
the term used mainly during the early Roman period for part of ancient Transjordan. It lay broadly east of Judea and Samaria, which were situated on the
The name Sukkot (Succoth) appears in a number of places in the Hebrew Bible as a location: An Egyptian Sukkot is the second of the stations of the Exodus
the region of Transjordan. The region is bounded in the west by the Jordan River, in the north by the deep ravine of the river Yarmouk and the region of