In antiquity known as Hegra, similar to Hijra, the site is said to have been carved out by Nabateans. As well as Muhammad, Salih preached against polytheism & idolatry: Is Madain actually Medina & are those prophets partial duplicates that fled Petra, as the local research of Dan Gibson suggests?
Nebajoth is the eldest son of Ishmael, who supposedly built the Kaaba & of whom Muslims claim to be descendants. As well as their neighbouring Maccabees, descendants from Isaac, the Nabateans succesfully resisted a Macedon Empire, but officially both of them ultimately became provinces of the Roman Empire: Did Abraham actually rule a once united kingdom?
During what is known as the Siege of Mecca, the Kaaba got destroyed, whereby the black rock split into three pieces: Was it actually a Siege of Petra by the Umayyads, whereafter Hashemites took them to the south to build a new sanctuary in a safer spot, which definitely became the new Becca after the Abbasids took power?
In the Last Crusade, Indiana Jones searches for the Holy Grail in the canyon of the Crescent Moon, a symbol of Islam & a scene filmed in Petra:
- Does the main character refer to Prester John?
- Is his team searching for a Lapis Exilis or Philosopher's Stone?
- Does the trembling temple refer to the many earthquakes the city endured?
One of those destructive earthquakes is officially dated right after the defeat of Abd al-Lah ibn al-Zubayr, another one about 330 years earlier, according with one of the chronological shifts of Anatoly Fomenko, so they might be duplicates. Even stronger, he claims Islam only originated about a millenium later, according with the historical research of Florin Diacu, nearly coinciding with the time Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab preached against Sufism: Did he hijack the biography of Salih?
Unlike Maslama ibn Habib, the movement of his compatriot, supporting Ibn Saud, later managed to conquer Mecca, driving the Hashemites & last caliph out of Arabia: Is it a coincidence they only held their royal title in Jordan?