[{ "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [35.28787, 32.23884] }, "properties": { "title": "Mount Ebal altar", "marker-color": "880088", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "circle"}}, { "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [35.39, 32.25] }, "properties": { "title": "Gilgal Nahal Tirtzah (Deut. 11:30)", "marker-color": "880088", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "circle"}}, { "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [35.512637, 32.161365] }, "properties": { "title": "
Gilgal Argaman", "marker-color": "ff0000", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "circle"}}, { "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [35.49, 32.10] }, "properties": { "title": "Gilgal Masuah", "marker-color": "ff0000", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "circle"}}, { "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [35.46, 32.06] }, "properties": { "title": "Gilgal Yafit", "marker-color": "ff0000", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "circle"}}, { "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [35.2564, 31.9654] }, "properties": { "title": "Gilgal Efraim (?)", "marker-color": "0000ff", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "circle"}}, { "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [35.33, 31.88] }, "properties": { "title": "Gilgal (Joshua 15:7)", "marker-color": "880088", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "circle"}}, { "type": "Feature", "geometry": { "type": "Point", "coordinates": [35.5161, 31.8326] }, "properties": { "title": "Gilgal Yericho (?)", "marker-color": "0000ff", "marker-size": "medium", "marker-symbol": "circle"}}] The term
gilgal is thought by many modern archaeologists to refer to a type of structure, which may then receive additional names, for example "the gilgal by the
terebinths of
Moreh" () or "the gilgal on the eastern border of Jericho" (). Gilgal structures have been found only in the
Jordan River valley, and in the
Samarian mountains on the edge of the desert. Pottery discoveries date them to the early Israelite period, with most remains from the 12th–11th centuries BCE. They are located on the lower slopes of a hill, have a footprint-shaped stone outline, and were used for occasional assembly rather than permanent dwelling. These sites are hypothesized to be ritual sites where the early Israelites celebrated holidays together, until worship was centralized. The footprint-shaped outline recalls ancient Egyptian symbolism in which a footprint symbolized ownership. The use of low slopes is in contrast to
Canaanite practice, which placed sanctuaries "on every lofty hill" (
2 Kings 17:10). This theory is disputed by
Nadav Na'aman, who argues that "gilgal" as a type of settlement never appears in the Bible, and that all references to a place of that name are either corruptions (for example of "Galilee") or refer to a single unidentified cultic site east of Jericho. ==Location==