During the Middle Kingdom, Egypt began to recover from the hardships it faced during the First Intermediate Period. In the Levant, this period witnessed economic and urban revival, as well as advanced trade and political relationships with most of the ancient civilizations in the Near East, particularly between Egypt and the Levant. It also saw a significant increase in the migrations of the Amorite, Canaanite, and Semitic peoples. The Amorites settled in the Levant and its southeastern regions (Jordan), while the Canaanites settled along its coast and in its southwestern regions (modern-day Palestine). This contributed to the Egyptians' growing concern about the threat to Egypt from the northeastern direction, especially from the south of the Levant (Jordan and Palestine). As a result, the kings of the Middle Kingdom built and fortified many sites in northern Sinai and southern Levant, such as in Megiddo in the Marj Ibn Amer plain in northern Palestine.
Elazab Shahen, A. M. (2024). The city Planning of Tell El-Dabᶜa in ancient Egypt. Journal of Aswan Faculty of Arts, 16.(2), 349-370. doi: 10.21608/mkasu.2024.269479.1281
MLA
Ahmed Mahmoud Elazab Shahen. "The city Planning of Tell El-Dabᶜa in ancient Egypt", Journal of Aswan Faculty of Arts, 16., 2, 2024, 349-370. doi: 10.21608/mkasu.2024.269479.1281
HARVARD
Elazab Shahen, A. M. (2024). 'The city Planning of Tell El-Dabᶜa in ancient Egypt', Journal of Aswan Faculty of Arts, 16.(2), pp. 349-370. doi: 10.21608/mkasu.2024.269479.1281
VANCOUVER
Elazab Shahen, A. M. The city Planning of Tell El-Dabᶜa in ancient Egypt. Journal of Aswan Faculty of Arts, 2024; 16.(2): 349-370. doi: 10.21608/mkasu.2024.269479.1281