Mount Sinai

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For other places named Mount Sinai, see: Mount Sinai (disambiguation)
Mount Sinai

View from the summit of Mount Sinai
Elevation 2,285 m (7,497 ft)
Location
Location Saint Katherine city, Sinai Peninsula, Egypt
Coordinates 28°32′23″N 33°58′24″E / 28.53972°N 33.97333°E / 28.53972; 33.97333
Sinai Peninsula, showing location of Jabal Musa

Mount Sinai (Arabic: طور سيناء, Ṭūr Sīnā’) (Hebrew: הר סיני, Har Sinai), also known as Mount Horeb, Mount Musa, Gabal Musa (Egyptian Arabic accent), Jabal Musa (standard Arabic meaning "Moses' Mountain") by the Bedouin, is the name of a mountain in Saint Katherine city, in the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt. In Arabic the words jabal and ṭūr have similar meanings, and a Mount Sinai is mentioned in the Quran chapter 'The Fig' (Sūrat al-Tīn) as "Ṭūr Sīnīn"[1]. Thomas Stratton, a 19th-century Scottish writer, compared ancient Semitic languages with Gaelic and claimed that the resemblance of Syriac ܛܘܪ ṭür 'a mount' and Gaelic torr 'a hill' demonstrated an "affinity" between the two languages.[1] Jabal Musa is the Bedouin and Christian traditional location of the Biblical Mount Sinai.[2]

Contents

[edit] Geography

Mount Sinai is a 2285 m-high mountain in Saint Katherine city, in Sinai region. It is next to Mount St. Catherine (at 2,629 m,[3] the tallest peak on the Sinai peninsula)[4]. It is surrounded on all sides by higher peaks of the mountain range.

[edit] Geology

Mount Sinai's rocks were formed in the late stage of the Arabian-Nubian Shield's (ANS) evolution. Mount Sinai displays a ring complex that consists of alkaline granites intruded into diverse rock types, including volcanics. The granites range in composition from syenogranite to alkali feldspar granite. The volcanic rocks are alkaline to peralkaline and they are represented by subaerial flows and eruptions and subvolcanic porphyry. Generally, the nature of the exposed rocks in Mount Sinai indicates that they originated from different depths. (M. G. Shahien, Geol. Dept., Beni Suef, Egypt)

[edit] Monastery

The Monastery of St. Catherine in Saint Katherine city is sited at the foot of the adjacent mountain - Mount Catherine - at an elevation of around 1550 m.

[edit] Religious Significance

A Greek Orthodox Chapel at the top of Mount Sinai

According to Bedouin tradition, this is the mountain where God gave laws to the Israelites. However, the earliest Christian traditions place this event at the nearby Mount Serbal, and a monastery was founded at its base in the 4th century; it was only in the 6th century that the monastery moved to the foot of Mount Catherine, following the guidance of Josephus's earlier claim that Sinai was the highest mountain in the area. Jebel Musa, which is adjacent to Mount Catherine, was only equated with Sinai, by Christians, after the 15th century. Also, for Muslims, there is a chapter named after this mountain in the Qur’an, entitled Sūrat al-Tīn, sūrah 95, in which God swears by the fig and the olive, by Mount Sinai, and by the city of Mecca.

Christian orthodoxies settled upon this mountain in the third century, Georgians moved to Sinai in the fifth century, although a Georgian colony was formed in the ninth century. Georgians erected their own temples in this area. The construction of one such temple was connected with the name of David The Builder, who contributed to the erecting of temples in Georgia and abroad as well. There were political, cultural and religious motives for locating the temple on Mount Sinai. Georgian monks living there were deeply connected with their motherland. The temple had its own plots[clarification needed] in Kartli. Some of the Georgian manuscripts of Sinai remain there, but others are kept in Tbilisi, St. Petersburg, Prague, New York, Paris and in private collections.

View down to the Monastery of St. Catherine from the trail to the summit.

Many modern biblical scholars now believe that the Israelites would have crossed the Sinai peninsula in a straight line, rather than detouring to the southern tip (assuming that they did not cross the eastern branch of the Red Sea/Reed Sea in boats or on a sandbar), and therefore look for Mount Sinai elsewhere.

The Song of Deborah, which textual scholars consider to be one of the oldest parts of the bible, suggests that Yahweh dwelt at Mount Seir, so many scholars favour a location in Nabatea (modern Arabia). Alternatively, the biblical descriptions of Sinai can be interpreted as describing a volcano, and so a small number of scholars have considered equating Sinai with locations in northwestern Saudi Arabia; there are no volcanoes in the Sinai Peninsula.

[edit] Ascent

Sunrise on Mt. Sinai

There are two principal routes to the summit. The longer and shallower route, Siket El Bashait, takes about 2.5 hours on foot, though camels can be used. The steeper, more direct route (Siket Sayidna Musa) is up the 3,750 "steps of penitence" in the ravine behind the monastery.[5]

[edit] Summit

Another view from the summit of Mount Sinai
The last few meters of the climb up Mount Sinai.

The summit of the mountain has a mosque and a Greek Orthodox chapel (which was constructed in 1934 on the ruins of a 16th century church) neither of which are open to the public. The chapel supposedly encloses the rock from which God made the Tablets of the Law. [6] At the summit also is "Moses' cave" where Moses waited to receive the Ten Commandments.

View from the summit of Mount Sinai

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ http://www.archive.org/stream/affinitybetweenh00stra/affinitybetweenh00stra_djvu.txt Library of Scotland, 1872.
  2. ^ Joseph J. Hobbs, Mount Sinai (University of Texas Press) 1995, discusses Mount Sinai as geography, history, ethnology and religion.
  3. ^ ""Mount Catherine" at Answers.com". http://www.answers.com/topic/mount-catherine?cat=travel. Retrieved 2008-03-14. 
  4. ^ "Sinai Geology". AllSinai.info. http://www.allsinai.info/sites/geology.htm. 
  5. ^ "Mount Sinai". AllSinai.info. http://www.allsinai.info/sites/sites/mount%20sinai.htm. 
  6. ^ "Mount Sinai, Egypt". Places of Peace and Power. http://www.sacredsites.com/africa/egypt/mount_sinai.html. 

[edit] External links