What was the impact of the Zionists on Palestine?

Any one can see the name on the Maps, what is the oldest map you can find with the Name "Israel" on it?
Israel Still does not have "formally delimited boundaries"
 
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Any one can see the name on the Maps, what is the oldest map you can find with the Name "Israel" on it?

Any one can see that Palestine is a recent invention, stupid twat :lol:

Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire...
Palestine did not exist in the geographical imagination of the Ottomans [400 years before W I]...[Before modern Israel], Jews referred to the territory as Eretz Yisrael, the land of Israel. Throughout the Ottoman period, pilgrims and clergy from both religious traditions visited what they considered the "Holy Land" following a route from the port of Jaffa to Jerusalem.
 
Rashid Khalidi, Professor of Middle East history at Columbia University and director of the Center for International Studies at the University of Chicago, Former advisor to Arab Palestinian groups...
There is a relatively recent tradition which argues that Palestinian nationalism has deep historical roots. As with other national movements, extreme advocates of this view anachronistically read back into the history of Palestine over the past few centuries a nationalist consciousness and identity that are in fact relatively modern. Among the manifestations of this outlook are a predilection for seeing in peoples such as the Canaanites, Jebusites and Philistines the lineal ancestors of the modern Palestinians.
I notice you dont provide a link to your out of context quote, scared that others may read the rest of the text?
Palestinian Identity: The ... - Google Libros

You still havent found an Old map of Israel
 
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Rashid Khalidi, Professor of Middle East history at Columbia University and director of the Center for International Studies at the University of Chicago, Former advisor to Arab Palestinian groups...
There is a relatively recent tradition which argues that Palestinian nationalism has deep historical roots. As with other national movements, extreme advocates of this view anachronistically read back into the history of Palestine over the past few centuries a nationalist consciousness and identity that are in fact relatively modern. Among the manifestations of this outlook are a predilection for seeing in peoples such as the Canaanites, Jebusites and Philistines the lineal ancestors of the modern Palestinians.
I notice you dont provide a link to your out of context quote, scared that others may read the rest of the text?
Palestinian Identity: The ... - Google Libros

You still havent found an Old map of Israel

This Palestinian identity invented in the mid-20th century, twat?

Middle East Historian Bernard Lewis...:lol:
The adjective Palestinian is comparatively new. This, I need hardly remind you, is a region of ancient civilization and of deep-rooted and often complex identitites. But, Palestine was not one of them. People might identify themselves for various purposes, by religion, by descent, or by allegiance to a particular state or ruler, or, sometimes, locality. But, when they did it locally it was generally either the city and the immediate district or the larger province, so they would have been Jerusalemites or Jaffaites or Syrians, identifying province of Syria
The constitution or the formation of a political entity called Palestine which eventually gave rise to a nationality called Palestinian were lasting innovations of the British Mandate
 

You still havent found an Old map of Israel

Even better, twat, an ancient Israeli society dating back over 3000 years.

Harvard University Semitic Museum: The Houses of Ancient Israel
In archaeological terms The Houses of Ancient Israel: Domestic, Royal, Divine focuses on the Iron Age (1200-586 B.C.E.). Iron I (1200-1000 B.C.E.) represents the premonarchical period. Iron II (1000-586 B.C.E.) was the time of kings. Uniting the tribal coalitions of Israel and Judah in the tenth century B.C.E., David and Solomon ruled over an expanding realm. After Solomon's death (c. 930 B.C.E.) Israel and Judah separated into two kingdoms.
Israel was led at times by strong kings, Omri and Ahab in the ninth century B.C.E. and Jereboam II in the eighth. The Houses of Ancient Israel § Semitic Museum
 
No Map = No cookie
"The Palestine position is this. If we deal with our commitments, there is first the general pledge to Hussein in October 1915, under which Palestine was included in the areas as to which Great Britain pledged itself that they should be Arab and independent in the future . . . Great Britain and France - Italy subsequently agreeing - committed themselves to an international administration of Palestine in consultation with Russia, who was an ally at that time . . . A new feature was brought into the case in November 1917, when Mr Balfour, with the authority of the War Cabinet, issued his famous declaration to the Zionists that Palestine 'should be the national home of the Jewish people, but that nothing should be done - and this, of course, was a most important proviso - to prejudice the civil and religious rights of the existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine. Those, as far as I know, are the only actual engagements into which we entered with regard to Palestine."
Sykes
 
Rashid Khalidi, Professor of Middle East history at Columbia University and director of the Center for International Studies at the University of Chicago, Former advisor to Arab Palestinian groups...
There is a relatively recent tradition which argues that Palestinian nationalism has deep historical roots. As with other national movements, extreme advocates of this view anachronistically read back into the history of Palestine over the past few centuries a nationalist consciousness and identity that are in fact relatively modern. Among the manifestations of this outlook are a predilection for seeing in peoples such as the Canaanites, Jebusites and Philistines the lineal ancestors of the modern Palestinians.
I notice you dont provide a link to your out of context quote, scared that others may read the rest of the text?
Palestinian Identity: The ... - Google Libros

You still havent found an Old map of Israel

Only Fakestinians would be scared of their own fake history that is a modern invention, confused twat :lol:

Rashid Khalidi, Professor of Middle East history and director of the Center for International Studies at the University of Chicago, Palestinian Representative...
There is a relatively recent tradition which argues that Palestinian nationalism has deep historical roots. As with other national movements, extreme advocates of this view anachronistically read back into the history of Palestine over the past few centuries a nationalist consciousness and identity that are in fact relatively modern. Among the manifestations of this outlook are a predilection for seeing in peoples such as the Canaanites, Jebusites and Philistines the lineal ancestors of the modern Palestinians.
 
No Map = No cookie
"The Palestine position is this. If we deal with our commitments, there is first the general pledge to Hussein in October 1915, under which Palestine was included in the areas as to which Great Britain pledged itself that they should be Arab and independent in the future . . . Great Britain and France - Italy subsequently agreeing - committed themselves to an international administration of Palestine in consultation with Russia, who was an ally at that time . . . A new feature was brought into the case in November 1917, when Mr Balfour, with the authority of the War Cabinet, issued his famous declaration to the Zionists that Palestine 'should be the national home of the Jewish people, but that nothing should be done - and this, of course, was a most important proviso - to prejudice the civil and religious rights of the existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine. Those, as far as I know, are the only actual engagements into which we entered with regard to Palestine."
Sykes

The British invented Palestine after WW I, stupid twat No wonder your spain is so backward and bankrupt:lol:

Jews have lived in and ruled in Canaan and, after, Israel for 3000 years.

PBS Nova...
In the banks of the Nile in southern Egypt in 1896, British archaeologisit Flinders Petrie unearthed one of the most important discoveries in biblical archaeology known as the Merneptah Stele. Merneptah's stele announces the entrance on the world stage of a People named Israel.

The Merneptah Stele is powerful evidence that a People called the Israelites are living in Canaan over 3000 years ago

Dr. Donald Redford, Egyptologist and archaeologist: The Merneptah Stele is priceless evidence for the presence of an ethnical group called Israel in Canaan.
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yvg2EZAEw5c]1/13 The Bible's Buried Secrets (NOVA PBS) - YouTube[/ame]
 
No Map = No cookie
"The Palestine position is this. If we deal with our commitments, there is first the general pledge to Hussein in October 1915, under which Palestine was included in the areas as to which Great Britain pledged itself that they should be Arab and independent in the future . . . Great Britain and France - Italy subsequently agreeing - committed themselves to an international administration of Palestine in consultation with Russia, who was an ally at that time . . . A new feature was brought into the case in November 1917, when Mr Balfour, with the authority of the War Cabinet, issued his famous declaration to the Zionists that Palestine 'should be the national home of the Jewish people, but that nothing should be done - and this, of course, was a most important proviso - to prejudice the civil and religious rights of the existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine. Those, as far as I know, are the only actual engagements into which we entered with regard to Palestine."
Sykes

Ancient Israel is verified by the archaeological record, twat. No such archaeological record exists for Fakestinians.

Harvard University Semitic Museum: The Houses of Ancient Israel
In archaeological terms The Houses of Ancient Israel: Domestic, Royal, Divine focuses on the Iron Age (1200-586 B.C.E.). Iron I (1200-1000 B.C.E.) represents the premonarchical period. Iron II (1000-586 B.C.E.) was the time of kings. Uniting the tribal coalitions of Israel and Judah in the tenth century B.C.E., David and Solomon ruled over an expanding realm. After Solomon's death (c. 930 B.C.E.) Israel and Judah separated into two kingdoms.
Israel was led at times by strong kings, Omri and Ahab in the ninth century B.C.E. and Jereboam II in the eighth. The Houses of Ancient Israel § Semitic Museum
 
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The British invented Palestine after WW I, stupid twat

And they just happened to chose the same name that was on the Map in 1570?
http://www.usmessageboard.com/israe...the-zionists-on-palestine-38.html#post4081713

Palestine didn't exist prior to WW I, stupid twat. No wonder your spain is backward and bankrupt:lol:

Cambridge University Press...
In Ottoman times, no political entity called Palestine existed. After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire at the end of the First World War, European boundary makers began to take greater interest in defining territorial limits for Palestine. Only since the 1920s has Palestine had formally delimited boundaries, though these have remained subject to repeated change and a source of bitter dispute
Palestine Boundaries 1833–1947 - Cambridge Archive Editions
 
. No wonder your spain is backward and bankrupt:lol:

We still learn stuff,
1492, expulsion of the jew
I like to research local history, and visit the lands previously owned by Spanish jews in Andalucia, many of them have there own water wells, so far I have recovered six bags of jewgold from them:eusa_angel:
 
We still learn stuff

Paying your countries bills has yet to be learned it would seem. :p

Show me the note, I signed nothing, I owe nothing

You have nothing, except, your daily 18 hour siestas, lazyass twat :lol:

9 Reasons Why Spain Is A Dead Economy Walking
Barring an economic bailout of mammoth proportions, the economy of Spain is completely and totally doomed. The socialist government of Spain is drowning in debt, unemployment is running rampant and everywhere you turn there are major economic problems. So will Spain be the next Greece? No. When the economy of Spain implodes it is going to be a whole lot worse...
9 Reasons Why Spain Is A Dead Economy Walking
 

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