Mt Carmel

Mount Carmel, Hebrew Har Ha-karmel,
Carmel, Mount [Credit: Doron Horovitz/© The State of Israel Government Press Office]
mountain range, northwestern Israel; the city of Haifa is on its northeastern slope. It divides the Plain of Esdraelon (ʿEmeq Yizreʿel) and the Galilee (east and north) from the coastal Plain of Sharon (south).
Sanctified since early times, Mt. Carmel is mentioned as a “holy mountain” in Egyptian records of the 16th century bc. As a “high place,” it was long a centre of idol worship, and its outstanding reference in the Bible is as the scene of Elijah’s confrontation with the false prophets of Baal (I Kings 18). Mt. Carmel was also sacred to the early Christians; individual hermits settled there as early as the 6th century ad. The Carmelites, a Roman Catholic monastic order, were founded in 1150; they received their first rule, or laws and regulations governing the conduct of their order, in 1206–14. Their monastery (rebuilt 1828) is near the traditional site of Elijah’s miracle.
DSCN9202
1
DSCN9205
2 The Shrine of the Báb is a structure in Haifa, Israel where the remains of the Báb, founder of the Bábí Faith and forerunner of Bahá'u'lláh in the Bahá'í Faith, have been buried; it is considered to be the second holiest place on Earth for Bahá'ís, after the Shrine of Bahá'u'lláh in Acre. Its precise location on Mount Carmel was designated by Bahá'u'lláh himself to his eldest son, `Abdu'l-Bahá, in 1891. `Abdu'l-Bahá planned the structure, which was designed and completed several years later by his grandson, Shoghi Effendi.
DSCN9206
3
DSCN9207
4
DSCN9208
5
DSCN9210
6
DSCN9213
7
DSCN9212
8
DSCN9215
9
DSCN9216
10
DSCN9217
11
DSCN9218
12
DSCN9219
13
DSCN9220
14
DSCN9221
15
DSCN9222
16
DSCN9223
17
DSCN9224
18
DSCN9225
19
DSCN9226
20
DSCN9227
21
DSCN9228
22
DSCN9229
23
DSCN9230
24
DSCN9232
25
DSCN9235
26