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To Sinai via the Red Sea, Tor, and Wady Hebran. Precipice of Ras Safsaf

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To Sinai via the Red Sea, Tor, and Wady Hebran. Precipice of Ras Safsaf

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Title from: Catalogue of photographs & lantern slides ... [1936?].
Caption on negative: Precipice of Ras Safsaf.
Date from Matson LOT cards.
Photograph taken half way up from Siqqat Armaziya on the eastern slopes of Gebel Armaziya, looking northwest and showing the slopes of Ras El Sefsafa (Monacha, Biblical Mount Horeb) and the vicinity of Wadi El Dier (Holy Valley) below the slopes. (Source: A. Shams, Sinai Peninsula Research, 2018)
Byzantine monastic structures are scattered across the valley and on the plateau of Biblical Mount Horeb and Mount Sinai (4th-7th centuries CE), including ruined buildings (dwellings), hermit cells, prayer niches, rock-paved paths, rock inscriptions and agricultural plots (water dams, reservoirs & cisterns, conduits and retaining walls), in addition to chapels from middle ages (9th-10th centuries CE) and 18th-19th centuries CE. Several ancient monastic and pilgrimage routes lead to the plateau from Wadi El Dier (Holy Valley), including Siqqat Armaziya, Siqqat Sydina Musa and Siqqat Abbas Basha. (Source: A. Shams, Sinai Peninsula Research, 2018)
Gift; Episcopal Home; 1978.

The G. Eric and Edith Matson Photograph Collection is a source of historical images of the Middle East. The majority of the images depict Palestine (present-day Israel and the West Bank) from 1898 to 1946. Most of the Library of Congress collection consists of over 23,000 glass and film photographic negatives and transparencies created by the American Colony Photo Department and its successor firm, the Matson Photo Service. The American Colony Photo Department in Jerusalem was one of several photo services operating in the Middle East before 1900. Catering primarily to the tourist trade, the American Colony and its competitors photographed holy sites, often including costumed actors recreating Biblical scenes. The firm’s photographers were residents of Palestine with knowledge of the land and people that gave them an advantage and made their coverage intimate and comprehensive. They documented Middle East culture, history, and political events from before World War I through the collapse of Ottoman rule, the British Mandate period, World War II, and the emergence of the State of Israel. The Matson Collection also includes images of people and locations in present-day Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, Iraq, and Turkey. Additionally, the firm produced photographs from an East African trip. The collection came to the Library of Congress between 1966 and 1981, through a series of gifts made by Eric Matson and his beneficiary, the Home for the Aged of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the Diocese of Los Angeles (now called the Kensington Episcopal Home).

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01/01/1900
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Library of Congress
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