In a message dated 7/24/06 9:14:55 P.M. Central Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

The Greek form Palaistinêi from which English "Palestine" is
ultimately derived, was first used in the 5th century BCE by
Herodotus who wrote of the "district of Syria, called Palaistinêi".
The boundaries of the area he referred to were not explicitly
stated, but Josephus used the name only for Philistia. Ptolemy also
used the term. In Latin, Pliny wrote of a region of Syria that
was "formerly called Palaestina" when describing the eastern coast
of the Mediterranean.

Roman times
As a result of the First Jewish-Roman War (66–73), Titus sacked
Jerusalem and destroyed the Second Temple, leaving only the Western
Wall. In 135, following the fall of a Jewish revolt led by Bar
Kokhba in 132–135, the Roman emperor Hadrian expelled most Jews from
Judea, leaving large Jewish populations in Samaria and the Galilee.
He also changed the name of the Roman province of Judea (Israel) to
Syria Palaestina named after the Philistines as an insult to the now
conquered Jews. In what was considered a form of psychological
warfare, the Romans also tried to change the name of Jerusalem to
Aelia Capitolina, but that had less staying power. Over time the
name Syria Palaestina was shortened to Palaestina, which by then had
become an administrative political unit within the Roman Empire.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palestine#History

OffWorld

Read it again dumbass. There never was a Palestinian nation, only a Palestinian region. OffWorld go back to school, obviously you didn't learn much. 
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