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  1. Apr 19, 2018 · Magdala, known as Migdal in Hebrew (מִגְדָּל: tower) and also as Taricheae (Ταριχέα, from the Greek Τάριχος or tarichos: preserved by salting or drying fish), was an important fishing town during the first century CE on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee and below Mount Arbel.

  2. Aug 1, 2022 · According to early Jewish sources, just beyond the gates of Tiberias was the small village of Migdal Nunayya, the only place on the Sea of Galilee that may have been called Magdala in the first few centuries C.E.

  3. Jul 11, 2017 · An indepth look at the meaning and etymology of the awesome name Magdala. We'll discuss the original Greek, plus the words and names Magdala is related to, plus the occurences of this name in the Bible.

  4. Ancient sources, however, indicate that the site’s first-century remains are likely those of the Galilean harbor city of Taricheae. Explore what we know of this ancient Jewish town and how it came to be mistakenly identified with Magdala.

  5. Oct 6, 2024 · Discovered in the center of a first-century C.E. synagogue at the Galilean site of Magdala, the Magdala Stone bears one of the earliest images of the seven-branched menorah. Photo: Yael Yulowich, courtesy Israel Antiquities Authority.

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  6. The majority of archaeologists now think that Magdala had its own Greek name: Taricheae. It was very normal in antiquity for cities to have two names, one of Semitic origin and a Greek name. We see examples of this in Bet Shean-Scythopolis, Rakkat-Tiberias, Emmaus-Nicopolis, etc.

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  8. Sep 1, 2022 · The place-name Magdala is very likely preserved in the name of Qarīyat al-Majdal, an Arab village, which existed by the Sea of Galilee until 1948. Ancient sources, for their turn, speak of a place called Taricheae, which is a derivation of the Greek “factories for salting fish,” or more precisely, “the vats used for salting fish.”