"Taanach" was spelled "Tannach" in the first and second Urantia Foundation
printings, it was changed in the third printing (1971).
Original Paragraph:
P1387:2, 126:1.2
This hill, a little more than one hundred years previously, had been the "high
place of Baal," and now it was the site of the tomb of Simeon, a reputed holy
man of Israel. From the summit of this hill of Simeon, Jesus looked out over
Nazareth and the surrounding country. He would gaze upon Megiddo and recall
the story of the Egyptian army winning its first great victory in Asia; and
how, later on, another such army defeated the Judean king Josiah. Not far away
he could look upon Tannach, where Deborah and Barak
defeated Sisera. In the distance he could view the hills of Dothan, where he
had been taught Joseph's brethren sold him into Egyptian slavery. He then would
shift his gaze over to Ebal and Gerizim and recount to himself the traditions
of Abraham, Jacob, and Abimelech. And thus he recalled and turned over in his
mind the historic and traditional events of his father Joseph's people.