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2006-10-06 10:54:52 · 12 answers · asked by kineticjesus 1 in Arts & Humanities History

12 answers

Rome

2006-10-06 10:56:47 · answer #1 · answered by estee06 5 · 0 5

Byblos (maybe). It's disputed. It could also be:

"Varanasi -- previously known as Kashi, Kaasi, Benares, and Benaras -- is the oldest living, continually inhabited, albeit decaying city in the
world. Unlike Jerusalem, Rome, Istanbul, Beijing or Lhasa, Benares--the spiritual capital of the Hindus--has retained its religious orientations, rituals, and a way of life for more than 3,000 years."

And some say Damascus:
"Damascus, the capital, said to be the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world, has naturally been the most important point of call."

2006-10-06 10:59:59 · answer #2 · answered by johnslat 7 · 3 1

off the top of head, probably Ur in Mesopotamia which was for sure the oldest large city of the ancient world. Dating back to 5000 B.C. There were smaller settlements in the Jordan Valley such as, Jericho and Canaan. The most interesting of the earliest cities in my opinion is the city of Knossos of the Minoan Civilization which date backs to 3600 B.C, check that out if your interested in sea peoples and ancient Mediterranean history.

2006-10-06 12:42:35 · answer #3 · answered by rslodell 1 · 0 1

Byblos, Lebanon established 5000 BCE
More about it at:
http://www.middleeast.com/byblos.htm


The source Link provides information for the oldest cities in the world.

2006-10-06 13:09:28 · answer #4 · answered by Randy 7 · 1 1

Capital City Of Syria, Damascus , oldest continuously inhabited and active

2006-10-06 11:28:53 · answer #5 · answered by MrMoon 3 · 0 4

Erich Fromm wrote a e book that I examine years in the past, _Ye would be as Gods_. i'm unable to discover it everywhere at present, curiously it is out of print, yet i could prefer to examine it lower back. besides the e book purports to be a sparkling, 'radical' interpretation of the previous testomony. It traced the imaginative and prescient of God, how human beings thought approximately him, from one e book of the OT to the subsequent, and how he replaced over the years. in actuality he lost means over the years, going from writer to absolute monarch to constitutional monarch to figurehead. some Christians insist the OT ought to be interpreted one hundred% actually, and that i think of they pass over the delicate (and not so diffused) ameliorations between the books, even the gospels of the recent testomony. the quicker books of the OT make the main experience if taken as allegory and legend. (i could say 'fantasy', interior the Joseph Campbell experience, yet that gets human beings extremely disillusioned!) in between the earliest thoughts, God 'walked' with Adam and Eve interior the backyard of Eden. He in no way walked with all of us after that.

2016-11-26 21:45:48 · answer #6 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Rome was founded in about the 9th Century, B.C., so it's been in continuous occupation for nearly three thousand years. But Jerusalem beats Rome hands down. Jerusalem was founded in about the Third Millennium, B.C., which makes it about two thousand years older than Rome. If there's an older city than that, still inhabited, I don't know what it would be.

2006-10-06 11:13:03 · answer #7 · answered by Jeffrey S 4 · 0 2

Gizeh! Egypt

2006-10-07 06:04:00 · answer #8 · answered by Gabrio 7 · 0 0

Damascus

2006-10-06 18:22:38 · answer #9 · answered by brainstorm 7 · 0 1

It could be Jericho, Israel.
Possibly one of the first areas of civilization, where civilization is defined as moving from hunter/gatherer to agriculture. About 9,000 years ago- and possibly continually inhabited.

2006-10-06 11:04:17 · answer #10 · answered by Morey000 7 · 1 1

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