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Jerusalem
Jerusalem
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Jerusalem is one of the oldest and most important cities in the world, with a history that spans over 3,000 years. The city is located in the Judean Hills of Israel, and has been inhabited by a number of different civilizations throughout its history.

Model of Jerusalem, circa 950 BC, from the southwest
SalemOptix, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

Main findings from biblical times are the

Gihon spring,

Siloam Pool,

Siloam inscription,

walls from the days of the First Temple

ivories from the days of the First Temple

plates of the blessing of the priests

Ketef Hinnom

GivatI parking lot

Jerusalem is perhaps best known as a religious center, and is considered sacred by three of the world's major monotheistic religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The city is home to many important religious sites, including the Western Wall (also known as the Wailing Wall), the Dome of the Rock, and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

The city was founded in the 4th millennium BCE, and was initially a small settlement known as Jebus. It was conquered by King David in the 10th century BCE, and was subsequently made the capital of the Israelite kingdom. Under the reign of King Solomon, the city was expanded and a grand temple was built.

Jerusalem was later destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 BCE, and many of its inhabitants were taken into captivity. The city was rebuilt by the Jews following their return from exile, and the Second Temple was constructed in the 5th century BCE.

In the 1st century CE, Jerusalem was occupied by the Romans, who destroyed the Second Temple in 70 CE following a Jewish uprising. The city subsequently became an important center of early Christianity, and was also conquered by the Islamic armies in the 7th century CE.

Jerusalem has been the site of numerous conflicts throughout history, and has been conquered and ruled by various empires and kingdoms, including the Crusaders, the Ottoman Empire, and the British. Today, the city remains an important center of religion, culture, and history, and continues to be a source of contention in the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

3D - 1st temple period

Jerusalem
Shiloh
Shiloh
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Tel Shiloh (in Arabic: Khirbet Seilun) is an archaeological site from the Bronza and Iron Ages identified with the city of Shiloh, mentioned in the Bible as the site of the Tabernacle in the period of the Judges (for example: Joshua 18:1; 1 Samuel 1:9). The tel covers an area of roughly 3 hectares. The location of Shiloh was identified already in the 14th century CE by traveler and geographer Rabbi Ishtori Haparchi. This identification proposal was accepted by modern scholars due to the preservation of the name and the site’s location fitting ancient sources. Shiloh is unique among biblical sites in that a description of its location appears in the Bible (Judges 21:19). Many researchers have attempted to identify the location of the Tabernacle in places all over the tel, but there is still no consensus on the matter.

By Deror Avi - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=76499167

History of the Site’s Research

Many expeditions excavated Shiloh over the years:

  • In 1922 a few small soundings were conducted by a group of Danish researchers led by archaeologist Aage Schmidt.
  • In the years 1926-1927, 1929 and 1932 excavations were conducted by an expedition from the National Museum of Copenhagen, led by Danish archaeologist Hans Kjaer and overseen by American archaeologist William Albright. Kjaer passed away prior to publishing a full report.
  • In 1963 Danish archaeologists Svend Holmes-Nielsen and Marie-Louise Buhl conducted a small sounding in preparation for the publication of the full report of Kjaer’s expedition, but much of the data of that season was lost on the way to Copenhagen. The first report of the two expeditions was published in 1969.
  • In the years 1981-1984 the site was excavated by an expedition from Bar-Ilan University led by Israel Finkelstein. At the same time Zeev Yeivin conducted excavations in the northern area of the tel out of hopes of finding the site of the Tabernacle.
  • In the years 2010-2018 the site was excavated on behalf of the Staff Officer of Archaeology of the Civil Administration for Judea and Samaria.
  • Since 2017 the site is being excavated by American archaeologist Scott Stripling.

The Site in the Bronze Age

The site was first settled in very limited capacity during the Middle Bronze IIB period (1750-1650 BCE). During the Middle Bronze III period (1650/1600-1550 BCE) a wall was built around the settlement, but it likely wasn’t intended for defensive purposes. A few storage facilities were constructed adjacent to the wall, and held various vessels, including many storage jars. Also found in these facilities were various objects that testify to the existence of a cultic site at Shiloh already during that period. The findings include: Cultic stands, votive bowls and a vessel in the shape of an ox. Other findings include stone and bone vessels. During the Late Bronze Age (1550-1200 BCE) the settlement at the site was likely discontinued and the site remained only as a cultic center, reflected in a number of favissae (cultic storage pits). Other findings from that period include cooking pots and a scarab. The site was abandoned during the Late Bronze IIA period (1400-1300 BCE).

The Site in the Iron Age

The site was resettled in the Iron I period for a short time (late 12th-first half of the 11th century BCE) by the Israelites, reflected by, among other things, several pillared houses found at the site. During that period there was a cultic center active at the site, identified with the Tabernacle, but its location, as mentioned above, is disputed. The site’s town planning shows that the settlement was not merely a simply village with a cultic center, but the entire settled area was considered part of a larger cultic compound which served the denizens of the region (if not also people who came from farther away). Findings from this period include: Flint sickles, a seal with the image of a goat and a vessel handle imprinted with a lion seal. Circa the end of the Iron I period the site was destroyed in a great conflagration. The site was resettled in limited capacity circa the end of the Iron II period (8th-7th centuries BCE) and was slowly abandoned due to, among other reasons, the Assyrian conquest. A ceramic pomegranate found at the site is dated to the Iron Age.

The Site in Later Periods

Only a few Persian and Early Hellenistic pottery sherds were found at the site, as well as a few Ptolemaic and Seleucid coins, and so it seems that the site wasn’t settled during those periods. The site was probably only resettled during the Roman period.

The Location of the Tabernacle

As mentioned, the exact location of the Tabernacle (the Iron I cultic center) at Tel Shiloh is disputed. Several different suggestions were raised over the years: (1) A tradition from the Medieval period which was accepted by some modern researchers, such as Chaim Gevaryahu, states that the Tabernacle was located at the nearby site of  Jami’ al-Yatim. However, excavations at the site have revealed that remnants there are to be dated no earlier than the 7th-8th centuries CE. (2) The Danish expedition suggested that the location of the Tabernacle was at the site of the Byzantine church at the tel, but there, too, there still haven’t been found more antiquated remnants. (3) Charles Wilson and other researchers after him suggested identifying the site of the Tabernacle with the northern segment of the tel. (4) Israel Finkelstein thought that the Tabernacle was located in the center of the tel, where he found a few Late Bronze favissae. In his view, the Iron Age cultic center replaced the Bronze Age one. (5) Yosef Garfinkel and a few other researchers suggested identifying the cultic center near the city gate.

Bibliography

I. Finkelstein and others, Shiloh: The Archaeology of a Biblical Site, Tel Aviv 1993.

K. W. Larsen, ‘The Seleucid and Hasmonean Coins of Shiloh:What They Do and Do Not Tell Us about the Occupation of Second Century BCE Shiloh’, Stone-Campbell Journal Conference, April 5-6, 2019.

R. Levitan-Ben Aryeh, ‘New Excavations in the Northern Plateau at Tel Shiloh’, in: A. Meron and others (eds.), Sefer Shiloh, Beit El 2016, pp. 208-223 [Hebrew].

T. Lopez and others, ‘A Ceramic Pomegranate from Shiloh’, Judea and Samaria Research Studies 28 (2019), pp. *37-*56.

Shiloh
Gezer
Gezer
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Tel Gezer is a large mound, lying in the western foothills of the Judean Mountains at a height of 250 m. above sea level. Gezer is adjacent to the modern village of Karmei Yosef and covers an area of 130 dunams. The site controls the junction of the Via Maris (which stretched from Egypt to Mesopotamia) with the route from the coast to Jerusalem. Gezer rose to fame partly thanks to its 10th-century BCE monumental gate, which some scholars believe was built by King Solomon. A recent alternative hypothesis linked the construction of the gate with the Kingdom of Gath.

Early research
The site (Arabic: Tell Jezar) was identified with biblical Gezer in 1871 by the French archaeologist Charles Clermont-Ganneau, who discovered in 1873 the "Boundary of Gezer" inscriptions. These inscriptions mention the name of the city, and confirm Clermont-Ganneau's identification. In the 1900s the site was excavated under the supervision of R.A.S. Macalister of the Palestine Exploration Fund. He excavated long north-south trenches down to the bedrock, often to a depth of 13 meters, which covered two-thirds of the surface of the mound. This irregular excavation method made later study at the site difficult.

Recent research
In 1964 a new expedition of the Hebrew Union College and the Semitic Museum at Harvard (today Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East) began excavations at the site for 10 years. William Dever led the expedition in 1966. In 2010 another excavation was conducted by the Israel Nature and Parks Authority and the New Orleans Baptist Seminary of Theology. Tzika Tzuk, one of the supervisors, came to the conclusion that the large water system was constructed in the Middle Bronze Age, making it the oldest known in the country.

The water system

References to Gezer from the time of Egyptian rule on Canaan (15th-13th centuries BCE)
The importance of Gezer in different periods can be studied through its mentions in many biblical and historical sources. The city is first mentioned in the list of cities captured by Pharaoh Thutmose III in his campaign in Canaan in 1468 BCE. Among the El-Amarna letters of the 14th century BCE, nine are of correspondences of the rulers of Gezer with the Egyptian Pharaohs Amenhotep III and his son Akhenaten. Gezer is also mentioned in the Merneptah Stele (known as the "Israel Stele") from c. 1220 BCE, as a city conquered in his campaign to Canaan. Dever claims that evidence of that destruction is seen at the site.

Biblical and Hasmonean sources
In the biblical sources Gezer is mentioned in the narrative of Joshua's conquest (Joshua 10) and later as a city in the territory of the Tribe of Ephraim (Joshua 16:3). King David in his war against his Philistines is said to have pushed them to the border of Gezer (II Samuel 5:25), his son Solomon is said to have built Gezer after receiving it from his bride's wife, identified with Pharaoh Siamun who ruled in c. 978-969 BCE (1 Kings 10:14-17). Gezer is mentioned as one of the most important cities constructed by Solomon (1 Kings 9:15-17). The Book of Maccabees states that Gezer was fortified and housed granaries and food storage in the 2nd century BCE (1 Maccabees 16:18-31, 35; 10:32-38). In historical sources, Gezer is said to have been conquered and fortified in the days of Judas Maccabeus and Simon Thassi during the Hasmonean period (2nd-1st centuries BCE).

Archaeological findings: The beginning of Canaanite Gezer
The strategic location of the site and its access to water sources attracted its residents. The earliest settlement layer of the site is from the Chalcolithic period (between 3600-3300 BCE). In the Middle Bronze period, Gezer became a large city, with extensive trade relations with Egypt and Mesopotamia. A large Canaanite temple with monumental columns was exposed, dating to the Middle Bronze III (1650-1550 BCE). Dever hypothesized that it was used in forming alliances with other political powers. Across the site many imported ware from Cyprus, Syria, and Egypt were found, indicating an increase in international trade during that period. At the end of the Middle Bronze period, a massive fortification system and water system were set. At the beginning of the Late Bronze Age period (around the year 1457 BCE) Gezer was destroyed, probably by Thutmose III, and continued to exist as a city-state under the rule of Egypt, until its withdrawal from Canaan in the 12th century BCE.

Gezer in the Iron Age - A city of King Solomon?
In the Iron Age I period (12th-10th centuries BCE) there is evidence of the continuation of the Canaanite settlement, in addition to a short period of Philistine presence between c. 1175-1050 BCE. In the beginning of the Iron Age IIa period (c. mid-10th century BCE), the site experienced violent destruction and on top of its ruins, a new settlement was established, including a monumental gate.

While Macalister claimed this gate is from the Hasmonean period, Israeli archaeologist Yigael Yadin claimed it was established by King Solomon. In 1 Kings 9:16-17 it is said that the Egyptian Pharaoh burnt Gezer and gave it to Solomon, his son-in-law, who erected massive fortifications and a city gate. Yadin based his claim on the similarity with the gates at Hazor and Megiddo, which were also linked to Solomon. Dever, who renewed the excavations, supported Yadin's hypothesis.

With the development of the archaeological research in recent years, scholars have claimed that in the Iron Age I period Gezer was under the control of the Philistine kingdom of Ekron (hence the evidence of a Philistine settlement). Accompanying these developments is a new hypothesis: Gezer's destruction and reconstruction, including the gate, should be attributed not to King Solomon but to the Kingdom of Gath. Either way, among the most important finds in the country is the "Gezer Calendar", which deals with agriculture and is one of the earliest examples of Ancient Hebrew script.

The gate:

Gezer in the monarchic period and under the rule of Assyria and Babylons (10th-6th centuries BCE)
Gezer was destroyed during the campaign of Shishak (identified with Sheshonq I) in c. 925 BCE. The question about the continuity of the settlement after that destruction was debated. Macalister claimed that Gezer was abandoned until the 5th century BCE, while Dever claimed that it continued until the Babylonian destruction in 586 BCE. The Assyrian tablets from the campaign of Tiglath-Pileser III in the southern Levant show, according to Dever, the conquest of Gezer in 733 BCE. An inscription from Nimurd even mentioned the name "Gazaru," meaning "our Gezer." According to Israeli archaeologist Roni Reich, after the Assyrian destruction of Gezer, it was re-established as an Assyrian administrative center. After the Babylonian conquest at the end of the 6th century BCE, Ephraim Stern identified evidence of the Persian period at the site, but without a considerable settlement. Later, it would seem that Gezer was uninhabited until the Hellenistic-Hasmonean period.

Gezer from the Classical periods until today
The Book of Maccabees describes Gezer as an administrative center with a fortress of the Hasmonean kings. Roni Reich has explored Macalister's findings and identified evidence that after the year 142 BCE the site was inhabited by Jewish residents, apparently under the rule of Simeon. However, no Hasmonean fortress was identified

During the Roman period, there was a sparse settlement at Gezer, which probably served as an agricultural estate, whose demarcation inscriptions mark its limits (dated to c. 100 CE). Several Byzantine (4th-7th centuries CE) graves were also excavated. In 1177 CE an important battle took place at the site, between Baldwin IV, the Crusader king, and Salah a-Din, which ended in the victory of the former. Clermont-Ganneau identified the site with Crusader Montgisard, whose remains were not discovered at the site. Today the site is a park. In 2022 it suffered from a wildfire, but most of the archaeological remains were not damaged.

Sources:

דיוור, ג. ויליאם. 1998. גזר: צומת דרכים בארץ ישראל הקדומה. הוצאת הקיבוץ המאוחד. תל אביב.

דיוור, ג. ויליאם. 1970. גזר- עיר קמה לתחייה. קדמוניות: כתב עת לעתיקות ארץ ישראל וארצות המקרא. כרך 2 (10): עמ' 57-62.

קוך, ע. 'המערך המדיני בשפלת יהודה בתקופת הברזל א-בI (1150-800 לפסה"נ), קתדרה 143 (2012), עמ' 45-64

Steven Ortiz and Samuel Wolff. 2012. Guarding the Border to Jerusalem: The Iron Age City of Gezer. Near Eastern Archaeology, Vol. 75, No. 1. pp. 4-19.

Biblical hiking Map

Gezer
Hazor
Hazor
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Hazor is one of the largest and most important cities in ancient Israel. It is identified with Tell el-Qedah, known today as "Tel Hazor". The site is located in the southern Hula Valley, west of Kibbutz Ayelet HaShahar. Hazor sits at a strategic crossroads that dominates the road leading from Egypt to Mesopotamia. From the 17th century BCE, Hazor was a political-economic center in the land of Canaan, and in the Late Bronze Age, Hazor was the largest of the royal cities in the country. In the book of Joshua, it is written that Canaanite Hazor was conquered by the Israelites under the leadership of Joshua, and its size and power are echoed in its description as "the head of all these kingdoms" (chapter 13:11). The archaeological showed that in the 10th-9th centuries BCE, Hazor was rebuilt and became a central city in the northern kingdom of Israel. The city was razed by Tiglath Pileser III in 734 BCE. After this destruction, a few remains of a settlement from the Persian period and then the Mamluk period were found on the site. Many impressive findings were uncovered on the site, including monumental royal palaces, temples, a complex of tombstones, and cuneiform tablets. Tel Hazor is one of the largest mounds in Israel and was declared a world heritage site in 2005.

The history of the excavation
Tell el-Qedah was excavated for the first time in 1928 by the British professor John Gerstang who proposed the identification of the site with the biblical Hazor. Between the years 1955-1958, the site was excavated by Prof. Yigal Yadin on behalf of the Hebrew University. Since 1990 Prof. Amnon Ben-Tor has been excavating in Hazor on behalf of the Hebrew University and the Complutense University of Madrid, under the auspices of the Israel Exploration Society. Since 1995, the Salz Foundation in New York participates in the dig and therefore it is called "The Selz Foundation Hazor Excavations in Memory of Yigal Yadin". Between the years 2006-2014, the late Dr. Sharon Zuckerman from the Hebrew University joined the excavations, and in 2015, Dr. Shlomit Bacher was added.

History of Canaanite Hazor
The city of Hazor was founded at the end of the 3rd millennium BCE and became a central Canaanite city in the transition between the Middle Bronze Age 2A and 2B (17th century BCE). The city reached its peak with the establishment of the lower city, in addition to the Acropolis, and its area spread over about 840 dunams divided between the upper city (about 140 dunams) and the lower city. The researchers support hypotheses on the strategic importance of Hazor in the Bronze Age by comparing its size to other mounds of the time and following the biblical references: "And Joshua sat at the hill and captured Hazor, and the queen, he struck with the sword: for Hazor was before her, see all these kingdoms" (Joshua 11:10), "And Yahweh was pleased, by the hand of Yabin, the king of Canaan, who reigned, in the court" (Judges 4:2). Hazor is also mentioned in important non-biblical archives such as the pharaonic "Writings of the Marat" from the 19th century BCE. Hazor is mentioned in the archives of the kingdom of Mari and it appears frequently in the Al-Amarna archive as, among other things, sending gifts from the king of Egypt to the king of Hazor (who is the only city in Canaan mentioned as "king" both in biblical sources and outside of them).

Archaeological remains of Canaanite Hazor
In the excavations, impressive complexes from the Middle Bronze Age were found, among them a complex of gravestones (indicating worship under the dome of the sky), a large royal palace, a temple, and a complex of warehouses for agricultural produce. The tomb complex and some of the warehouses fell out of use in the Late Bronze Age. Yadin hypothesized that the city of Hazor was destroyed at the end of the Middle Bronze Age (around 1500 BCE) and was rebuilt in the Late Bronze Age, a hypothesis opposed by Ben-Tor, who argued for a quiet transition while restructuring the upper city without destruction. Beyond the impressive architectural findings, a large amount of figurines, statues (including Egyptian statues), weapons, and many cuneiform tablets (which make up about a fifth of the cuneiform tablets found in the country). Most of the tablets are administrative and financial documents from the Canaanite period and the researchers hope that in the next excavation seasons the archive of the ancient kings of Hazor will be found.

Israelite Hazor
The time of the destruction of Canaanite Hazor is disputed among scholars. Yadin determined the time of its conquest to 1250 BCE, the beginning of the Israeli settlement corresponding to the conquests of Joshua, while Prof. Yohanan Aharoni delays the occupation to the time of the settlement of the tribes according to the Book of Judges, about a century later. After the Israeli occupation, the lower Canaanite city was abandoned and no longer inhabited. According to Ben-Tor, the massive burnt layer (dated to the end of the Late Bronze Age) confirms the scripture "Only all the cities, standing on the hill, did not burn, Israel: I burned Hazor alone, Joshua burned" (Joshua 11:13). The construction of Hazor as a large Israeli city was attributed by Yadin to King Solomon in the 10th century BCE, alongside the cities of Gezer and Megiddo which bear similar architectural characteristics. The Ben-Tor excavations might confirm Yadin's conclusions. This city included residential buildings, warehouses, fortifications and a gate similar to the gates at Megiddo and Gezer. According to Dr. Doron Ben-Ami, a member of the Hazor excavation expedition, there are few findings from the Iron Age 1 (12th-11th centuries BCE) at the site and they mainly include dozens of pits that were excavated in the ruins of the Canaanite city. The excavations also revealed a large water plant intended to supply water during a siege and its construction was attributed to King Ahab of Israel.

Biblical Hiking map

sources

Aviram, Y. Gitin, S. Mazar, p. faithful, n. Zuckerman, S. Stern A. (Editors) 2011. The Land of Israel, studies in the knowledge of the land and its antiquities. Sefer Amnon Ben Tor. Society for the Study of the Land of Israel and its Antiquities. Volume Thirty: 1-14, 59-73, 195-199, 328-342.

Ben-Tor, A. Rubiato, M. 1996. The renewed excavations at Tel Hazor. antiquity. Issue 1 (111): 2-18.

Ben-Ami, d. 2011. Hazor at the beginning of the Iron Age. antiquity. Issue 143: 24-27.

Sandhus, d. 2011. Hazor in the 9th-8th centuries BC. antiquity. Issue 143: 28-33.

Ben-Tor, A. 2004. Hazor and Chronology. Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant. Vol. 14: pp. 45-67.

Hazor
Dan
Dan

Tel Dan (Arabic "Tel El Kadi" - "The Judge's Hill") sits in the Hula Valley at the foot of Mount Hermon, about 200 m above sea level. Tel Dan’s elliptical shape dominates its surroundings from a height of about 18 m, thanks to a steep earthen embankment from the second millennium BCE. The site was identified by Edward Robinson in 1852 as the biblical city of Dan and was excavated by Dr. Avraham Biran from 1964-1989. The digs were conducted first by the Department of Antiquities and Museums and later the Glueck Institute for Biblical Archeology of the Hebrew Union College. The mound was settled starting from the Ceramic Neolithic period and intermittently until later periods. During the Early and Middle Bronze Age there was a central city called "Laish" at the site, which was called "Dan" after it was conquered by the tribe of Dan during the settlement period. Among the main finds at the site: an Aramaic inscription that mentions the House of David, a large ritual center from the Iron Age that was in use until the Hellenistic period; a decorated clay plaque known as the "Dancer of Dan"; impressive fortifications and an elaborate gatehouse.

Historical and biblical references to the city of Dan

The city first appears under the name "Laish" in the 18th c. BCE Egyptian execration texts, the archive of Mari from the same period, and the description of Pharaoh Thutmose III’s military campaign in the 15th c. BCE. The Bible says that after it was conquered by the tribe of Dan its name was changed: "And the name of the city was called Dan... but Laish was the name of the city for the first time" (Judges 18:9). The city of Dan is mentioned in the census conducted by King David (1 Chronicles 22:2). During the reign of Jeroboam, King of Israel, it became a ritual center where a golden calf was placed (1 Kings 12:29) which caused the prophet Amos to cry out to the people of Israel that they were worshiping "the God of Dan" (Amos 8:15).

The ancient times at Dan

The earliest findings discovered in the mound date to the Ceramic Neolithic period (fifth millennium BCE). Abandoned for almost a thousand years, Dan became a significant city called "Laish" in the Early Bronze Age 2-3 (30th-25th c. BCE). According to Biran, the city spread over about 200 dunams and was probably the largest in the region. This city ceased to exist around 2,400 BCE, for no known reason.

The fortified Canaanite city "Laish"

The site was renewed in the Middle Bronze Age 2a (20th-19th c. BCE) when a large earthen embankment was constructed, surrounding the settlement and making an elliptical shape that is still visible today. A huge well-preserved gatehouse was found nearby, which excavators called "Abraham's Gate" and dated to the 18th century BCE. The city grew during the Late Bronze Age (15th-13th centuries BCE). The "Mycenaean tomb", associated with this period, contained many expensive burial offerings, most of which were imported, testifying to international commercial relations. Another interesting find was a clay plate depicting a man playing and raising his leg in a dance movement, called "the dancer from Dan."

The city of Dan in the Biblical period

According to Biran, the city of Laish was conquered in 1200 BCE. The evidence from the 12th century BCE point to a sharp change in the material culture. Deep silo pits and only local ceramic finds, mainly storage vessels, were discovered from this phase. The destruction layer found in the mound dates to the middle of the 11th century BCE, and some believe that it belongs to the Philistine occupation, after which the settlement was rebuilt. Several blacksmiths' forges point to Dan’s role as a metal factory city in the 10th century BCE. The Bible describes the transformation of Dan into an important administrative and ritual center in the Kingdom of Israel. Biran excavated a sacred complex with many ritual objects including a plastered device that might have been used for the water mixing ceremony in the 10th-9th c. BCE. Some of the finds indicate a close relationship between Phoenician Tyre and Dan.

Dan during the Northern Kingdom of Israel and Aram-Damascus

Dan continued to serve as a ritual center during the days of King Ahab of Israel. From the period between the 9th-8th c. BCE, large platforms made of ashlar stones, impressive fortifications, an elaborate gatehouse, and a unique structure known as the eaves house were built. In the early 8th c. BCE, the city of Dan prospered thanks to the defeat of the Arameans by the Assyrian kingdom, among other reasons. The ritual center in Dan grew and expanded in the days of Jeroboam II (785 BCE), and new altars and pyres were constructed. Excavators in 1993 found an inscription near ​​the Israeli gate. The victory inscription (or Tel Dan Stele), dated between the 9th-8th c. BCE, was written on a stone in Aramaic and is interpreted as archaeological evidence for the existence of a "House of David". The inscription was probably placed by the Arameans under King Hazael, and after Dan returned to the rule of Israel, it was torn down and used to build the new gate.

Under the rule of the empires and after

Tel Dan was occupied by the Assyrians in 732-733 BCE, after which the ritual complex was still in use - perhaps by the population that the Assyrians brought to the city. Even after the decline of the city during the Babylonian occupation (590 BCE), the ritual complex survived. It was still used during the Persian period when Dan belonged to the "Abar-Nahara” satrapy. The cult complex expanded in the Hellenistic period, a time when a massive immigration to Dan might have occurred. During the excavations in 1976, an early 2nd c. BCE bilingual inscription (Greek and Aramaic) was found in the ritual complex, and describes a Greek named Zoilos who made a vow "to God who is in Dan." In the Roman period, the city was almost completely abandoned. Scant remains of a settlement were found in the southern area, possibly pointing to the "village of Dan" mentioned by Eusebius of Caesarea. Coins were also found, the last of which belonged to the emperor Honoitus (393-408 CE).

sources

Ilan, d. 2018. The "Tower" temple from the Middle Bronze Age in Tel Dan. Book by Lawrence A. Staiger. The Land of Israel: Studies in the Knowledge of the Land and its Antiquities. pp. 25-37. Byrne, A. 1992. 25 years of excavations at Tel Dan. Society for the Investigation of the Land of Israel and its Antiquities. Published by the united kibbutz. Tel Aviv. Greer, J. 2013. Dinner at Dan: Biblical and Archaeological Evidence for Sacred Feasts at Iron Age II Tel Dan and Their Significance. Brill. Boston.

Biblical Hiking map

Dan
Megiddo
Megiddo
[youtube_drone url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hP_qpDjGtEo&t=16s"]

Megiddo began to dominate the surrounding countryside in the 4th millennium B.C.E. (ca. 3500) – at the dawn of urbanization in the Levant. Today its monumental architecture provides the most impressive evidence of the rise of the first cities in the region.

Megiddo was the site of epic battles that decided the fate of western Asia. When the Canaanite city-states revolted against 15th century B.C.E Pharaonic attempts at hegemony, it was at Megiddo that they assembled to do battle. The Egyptian army, led by Pharaoh Thutmose III, surprised the rebels by choosing the most dangerous route of attack – through the narrow ‘Aruna Pass. After routing the Canaanite forces and capturing rich booty, Thutmose III laid siege to the city for seven months. His decisive victory enabled him to incorporate Canaan as a province in the Empire of the New Kingdom. The description of the battle of Megiddo is the earliest account of a major war in antiquity.

The Bible lists the king of Megiddo among the Canaanite rulers defeated by Joshua in his conquest of the land (Josh. 12:21). According to I Kings (9:15), King Solomon built Megiddo together with Hazor and Gezer. At that time the city had become the center of a royal province of the United Monarchy. The Egyptian Pharaoh Shishak took Megiddo in the second half of the 10th century. His conquest of the city is affirmed both in his inscriptions at the Temple at Karnak and in a stele erected at the site. In the 9th and 8th centuries B.C.E., the rulers of the Northern Kingdom refitted the fortress even more elaborately than before. The palaces, water systems and fortifications of Israelite Megiddo are among the most elaborate Iron Age architectural remains unearthed in the Levant.

In 732 B.C.E., the Assyrian King Tiglath-pileser III took the region from the Northern Kingdom. In the following years Megiddo served as the capital of an Assyrian province. With the fall of the Assyrian empire the great religious reformer, King Josiah of Judah, was called to Megiddo to report to Pharaoh Necho of Egypt, who was on his way to assist the crumbling Assyrian army in its last-ditch efforts against the Babylonians. Josiah was slaughtered by Necho (II Kings 23:29). Recollection of this event, along with the memories of the great battles fought here, were probably the bases for the idea in the Book of Revelations (16:16) that Armageddon (the mound of Megiddo) would at the end of days be the site of the last battle between the forces of good and the forces of evil.

The Megiddo Expedition

Biblical Hiking map

Megiddo
Lachish
Lachish
[youtube_drone url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-ijezlt53A&t=1s"]

Tel Lachish is an archaeological site that covers some 124 dunams and lies near Moshav Lachish in the Shephelah region. The Arabic name of the site is Tell ed-Duweir. The tel was first identified as the location of the biblical city of Lachish by the American archaeologist William Albright in 1929. The identification was based mainly on the site’s geographical location, which matches biblical and Christian sources. This was later shown to be correct based on archaeological findings.

History of the Research

The tel was excavated by several expeditions over the years: the first excavations were conducted in the years 1932-1938 by British archaeologist James Starkey until his murder in 1938 during the Arab Revolt in British Mandate Palestine. In the years 1966 and 1968, the site was excavated in a reduced capacity by Yohanan Aharoni. From 1973-1994 the site was excavated in wide capacity by David Ussishkin. In 2013-2017, the site was excavated by a joint expedition from the Hebrew University and the Southern Adventist University, headed by Yosef Garfinkel and Michael Hasel. Since 2017 the tel is being excavated in a reduced capacity by a joint Israeli-Austrian expedition headed by Felix Höflmayer.

Early Lachish

From the Potter Neolithic era until the Early Bronze II period (6th millennium-early 3rd millennium BCE), the settlement at the site was small. From the Early Bronze III (2800-2500 BCE) the settlement expanded and may have even been fortified. Circa 2200 BCE the site was destroyed or abandoned and remained in this state until the Middle Bronze Age (beginning of the 2nd millennium BCE), when it was resettled, until it was destroyed by fire around 1550 BCE. The site was rebuilt during the Late Bronze Ib (beginning of the 14th century BCE) and remained active until the end of the 13th century. Five letters from various kings of Lachish sent to the pharaoh were found among the ‘El-Amarna Letters.’ The city and its rulers are mentioned in other letters as well. Among the findings from this period are: a temple to the Canaanite goddess Elat and her Egyptian counterpart Hathor, which was built in a fosse that wrapped around the tel; a scarab belonging to Ramesses II; and Egyptian and Mycenean pottery vessels (the latter from Mycenae near the Aegean Sea).

The Canaanite and Judahite city of Lachish

During the Late Bronze IIIb (beginning of the 12th c. BCE), a wealthy Canaanite city controlled by Egypt was located at the site. Among the findings of this era may be counted jewelry, scarabs, glass vessels, ivories, a number of Canaanite temples, a golden cultic plaque and more. The city was destroyed circa 1130 BCE, perhaps at the hands of the Sea Peoples, and in due time, became a Judahite city which was active during the Iron IIa-IIb period (early 10th-end of 8th c. BCE according to the higher chronology). During some of this era the city was fortified and included massive walls and a gate. It is possible that these fortifications were related to Rehoboam’s fortification plan (2 Chronicles 11:5-12). Findings from this period include a fortified palace, dozens of ‘LMLK’ jars and private jars, many ‘Shekel’ weights and more.

Lachish between the Assyrian campaign of Sennacherib and the Babylonian campaign of Nebuchadnezzar

The city was destroyed during Sennacherib’s conquest of Judah in 701 BCE. A testament to the destruction of Lachish is found on massive wall reliefs that decorated Sennacherib’s palace at Nineveh and describe the storming of the city. The Assyrian attack on Lachish is also hinted at in the Bible (2 Kings 18:14-19; Isaiah 36:2; 37:8; 2 Chronicles 32:9). Findings from the battle include arrowheads, spears, slingstones, pieces of armor, and more. During the Iron IIc (7th c. BCE) the site was rebuilt as a fortified settlement. In that settlement strata the ‘Lachish Letters’ were found. These are a collection of ostraca that document activities of the Judahite soldiers stationed at Lachish and at nearby military bases. The city was destroyed again during Nebuchadnezzar’s conquest of Judah, in 588 or 586 BCE.

The site after the Babylonian destruction
At the beginning of the Persian period (end of the 6th c. BCE), the site was settled once again and later on became a fortified administrative center. The site continued to exist through the Hellenistic period and in the Roman period, a small village existed at the site.

Sources:

D. Diringer, 'The Early Hebrew Weights Found at Lachish', PEQ 74 (1942), pp. 82-103

D. Ussishkin et al, The Renewed Archaeological Excavations at Lachish (1973-1994) - Vol. I, Tel Aviv 2004

D. Ussishkin et al, The Renewed Archaeological Excavations at Lachish (1973-1994) - Vol. IV, Tel Aviv 2004

3D

Lachish
Arad
Arad
[youtube_drone url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gd0AC1Q2SWU"]

background

Tel Arad is located about 8 km west of the city of Arad, between the Be'er Sheba valley and the Arad valley. The name "Arad" is mentioned in the Bible as the name of a Canaanite city in the eastern Negev, and in the list of cities of the Negev of Judah (with possible letters - "Adar"). This ancient name has been preserved throughout history, up to the present day. The results of the excavations in Arad and other sites in the Beer Sheba valley have greatly contributed to the understanding of the area and its history, and have made it one of the most researched areas in Israel. A conservation and reconstruction operation was carried out at the site, focusing on the Canaanite city and the Judean citadel.

The site was surveyed by Nelson Glueck (American School of Archaeology) and David Alon (Antiquities Authority) in the 1950s, and 18 seasons of excavation were conducted alternately between 1966-1984 by the Israel Exploration Society, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and the Israel Museum. Starting with the second season of excavations, work at the mound was conducted in two expeditions operating simultaneously - one focused on the Canaanite city, led by the late Prof. Ruth Amiran, and the other on the citadel, led by the late Prof. Yohanan Aharoni, who died in 1976 and did not fully publish his findings.

The Canaanite city

The earliest layer on the site refers to the "Beer Sheba culture" that existed in the Chalcolithic period (4500-3500 BCE), and the main finds are silos and foundations for temporary buildings. In the Early Bronze Age I (around 3200 BCE), a settlement developed that consisted of dwellings in natural caves and became a large and well-planned city which was destroyed and abandoned at the end of the Early Bronze Age II (2650 BCE). An important find from this period is Serach Naramer (the first ruler of united Egypt), which indicates trade between Egypt and the south of the Land of Israel at that time. The Canaanite city was characterized by the "Aredite house" model, which has a similar structure throughout the city. In addition, a central water reservoir was found, which was used by the residents of the site even in the later periods.

Citadel Hill

The citadel mound, located in the northeastern part of the site, developed on the ruins of the Canaanite city. 12 settlement layers have been identified at the tel, which include the remains of six citadels that were built one on top of the other. The researchers identified the division between layers using the height of the floor level in each layer. There is a height difference of about 2 m between the earliest and the latest layer on the citadel mound. The citadel was inhabited almost continuously from the 11th century BCE, until the destruction of the Kingdom of Judah in 586 BCE. In the 10th century BCE, a citadel was built there with a closing wall (consisting of rooms adjacent to each other). This citadel was destroyed at the end of the 10th century (possibly as part of a campaign launched in 924 BCE). The citadel that was built immediately after, under the rule of the Kingdom of Judah, had a full and wide wall, and included a complex defense system (like watchtowers), residential complexes, archives, food and equipment warehouses, a complex water system and a temple.

The temple in Arad existed between the 8th and 9th centuries BCE and underwent several architectural changes throughout the years of its existence. An area with an altar and a covered structure that included a hall and a shrine was found in the vicinity of the temple. Inside the shrine a tombstone and 2 incense altars were found. On top of the altars were kept remains of material burnt organic matter. Following residue analysis tests (among other things), cannabis and animal fat were found in the remains, which shed light on the Jewish worship at that time. The altars were found covered and this is probably evidence of the cancellation of the worship in the building at the end of the 8th century BCE, possibly as part of the ritual reform of King Hezekiah.

In one of the burnt rooms at the site, an archive was discovered containing seals, administrative inscriptions and ostraca, which mention the name of one of the commanders of the citadel in the 7th-6th centuries BCE - Elishiv bin Ashiyahu. This archive is a testimony to the meticulous and professional administration in the Kingdom of Judah. Inscriptions referring to historical events were found in it. In addition, the study of the text reveals the set of roads, the identification of names and the administrative structure.

The citadel mound is rich in objects and products that testify to rich and developed trade relations. For example - trees from Lebanon, vessels from the Galilee and the Golan, a Galilee seal and a bronze statue with Assyrian influence. In addition, in a number of inscriptions, mentions of sects (Greeks? Cypriots?) and theophoric names were found that mention the Edomite god "Kos." An inscription was also found that was used in Hieratic (Egyptian) letters.

After the destruction of Judah

The site continued to serve as a regional administrative center responsible for trade, provision of supplies and protection of caravans even after the period of the Kingdom of Judah. The empires and kingdoms that ruled the land used it for this role also in the Persian period, as well as in the Hellenistic, early Roman and early Arab periods. In later times it was used as a burial site for Bedouins.

Sources:

Eran Arie, Baruch Rosen & Dvory Namdar (2020) Cannabis and Frankincense at the Judahite Shrine of Arad, Tel Aviv, 47:1, pp. 5-28.

Herzog, Z. (1997). Arad: the citadel mound in Arad. Published by the united kibbutz.

Amiran, R., Ilan, A., Saban, M. (1997). Arad: Canaanite Arad - a gateway city to the desert. Published by the united kibbutz.

Arad
Azekah
Azekah
[youtube_drone url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_lVPXpdBH3Q"]

Azekah is a biblical city identified with Tell Zakarîya, not far from Beth Shemesh. The tel is 45 dunams in size and was first identified by the geographer Rabbi Yehosef Schwartz in 1845 in his book “Tevuot Ha’aretz”. The identification was based on the geographical location fitting the biblical description and on the partial preservation of the name ‘Azekah’ in the name ‘Azakariya’, the name of the tel as it was known by Schwartz. This proposal was not accepted by all scholars, and some suggested identifying the site with biblical Socoh. In 1924 the American archaeologist William Albright opined that Tell Zakarîya should, indeed, be identified with Azekah, and his view has since been accepted by scholars.

History of the Excavations

The tel was first excavated by the American archaeologist Frederick Bliss together with the Scottish archaeologist Robert Macalister in the years 1898-1899. Since 2012 the tel is being excavated by a joint expedition from Tel Aviv University and Heidelberg University, led by Oded Lipschits and Manfred Oeming. The Ottoman-era excavation permits were given on the condition that at the end of the excavation the areas would be covered once again, and so the research of the joint expedition includes restoring and re-analyzing the findings from the Bliss-Macalister expedition.

A Canaanite city in the Bronze Age

The site was first settled in the Early Bronze III period (2800-2500 BCE) and remained continuously active until the Late Bronze age (1550-1130 BCE). During the Late Bronze age, Azekah was a magnificent Canaanite city indirectly controlled by Egypt. Findings from this period include a number of scarabs, pottery vessels decorated with animal designs, Egyptian amulets, Egyptian blue and a massive structure where four people were found to have been buried alive during the destruction of the city. This destruction occurred sometime during the second half of the 12th century BCE. Post-destruction, Azekah remained abandoned for the next 200 years.

Azkah in the Iron Age until its destruction during Sennacherib's campaign

During the Iron IIA period (10th century BCE) a small rural settlement was built on the site. Findings from this era include a house that may belong to the ‘pillared house’ type, pottery vessels and a house-foundation offering (a bowl and a candle buried beneath the entrance of the house). These findings reveal that the people who lived at the site during this period had a significant affinity to the Canaanite culture that controlled the site during the Bronze Age. It is not known when Azekah was annexed into the Judahite Kingdom, but it occurred by the end of the 8th century BCE. By then, ‘LMLK’ jars, statuettes, loom weights and a formation of outer walls, possibly connected to a new fortification system or to an enemy siege system, appeared at the site. An Assyrian inscription from the time of Sennacherib mentioning Azekah testifies that the city was conquered and destroyed during his conquest of the Land of Judah, in 701 BCE.

Azkah after the destruction of Sennacherib

The settlement on the site was rebuilt during the Iron IIC period (7th-early 6th centuries BCE) in a small capacity. Findings from this period include a citadel that stood at the top of the tel and 14 stamped vessel handles. According to the ‘Lachish Letters’, it seems that during this era Azekah was part of a system of Judahite forts which included Lachish and another, smaller unknown fort. Azekah is mentioned in Letter No. 4, which says: “May the LORD cause my lord to hear […] And may (my lord) be apprised that we are watching for the fire signals of Lachish according to all the signs which my lord has given, because we cannot see Azekah.” This letter was sent by Hoshayahu, the commander of the unknown fort, to Ya’ush, the commander of the citadel at Lachish. It is unknown whether this letter was a standard military procedure which announced that the soldiers of the fort depended upon the torches of Lachish, or whether this was an emergency report alerting that the torches of Azekah could no longer be seen because the citadel there had been destroyed by the Babylonians.

Azekah in the Babylonian, Persian, Hellenistic and Roman Periods

During the Babylonian period (the first half of the 6th century BCE) the site became even smaller. It only grew into a large village during the late Persian period (4th-3rd centuries BCE). This village was probably part of the Yehud Province. Among the findings from this period may be counted a number of structures, a kiln, and pottery vessels typical of the Yehud Province. The site was abandoned around the end of the 3rd century BCE and resettled during the 2nd century BCE, until it was abandoned once again after the Bar Kokhba Revolt.

Sources

F. J. Bliss and R. A. S. Macalister, Excavations in Palestine During the Years 1898-1900, London 1902

O. Lipschits et al, ‘Five Seasons of Excavations at Tel Azekah: Expectations, Findings and Surprises’, Qadmoniyot 156 (2018), pp. 84-99 [Hebrew]

O. Lipschits et al, ‘Tel Azekah - 2019’, Hadashot Hadashot Arkheologiyot 133 (2021) [published online at the ‘Hadashot Arkheologiyot’ website]

O. Lipschits et al, ‘The Last Days of Canaanite Azekah’, Biblical Archaeology Review, 45 (2019), pp. 32-38; 70

Y. Schwartz, Tevuot Ha’aretz (Which is part II of the Book Divrei Yosef), Jerusalem 1900 [Hebrew]

Azekah
Gath
Gath
[youtube_drone url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gi29bT3ctbs"]

Gath (also known as “Gath of the Philistines”) is a biblical Philistine city identified with Tel es-Safi (formerly the Arab village of es-Safi) near Kfar Menachem in the Shephelah region. The site covers an area of some 40-50 hectares. The identification of Tel es-Safi with Gath was first proposed in the mid-19th century by the Irish scholar Josaias Porter, but over the course of the 20th century other proposals were put forward for the location of Gath, such as Tel Erani and Ra’s Abu Hamid.

History of the Research

Thus far the site has been excavated by two expeditions: In 1899 by an expedition from the PEF led by the American archaeologist Frederick Bliss and the Irish archaeologist Robert Macalister, and in the years 1996-2021 (except for 2003) by an expedition led by Aren Maeir of Bar-Ilan University. Maeir continues to hold localized excavations around the tel. It should be noted that over the course of the 50s and 60s Moshe Dayan held several illegal excavations at the site. Selected findings from his excavations are on display at the museum erected in his home.

The Site in the Early, Intermediate and Middle Bronze Ages

The site was only minimally active in prehistoric times. Significant activity began in the Early Bronze Age (3500-2500 BCE), and circa the end of the Early Bronze III period (2900-2500 BCE) the acropolis of the tel was already vast and fortified. Other than impressive buildings, small artifacts were also uncovered such as an ivory signet ring with a lion carving. In the Intermediate Bronze Age (2500-2000 BCE) the settlement at the site greatly dwindled in size and slowly expanded once more over the course of the Middle Bronze Age (2000-1500 BCE).

The Site in the Late Bronze Age

In the Late Bronze Age (1500-1200 BCE) the site became a regional center, as reflected in a few mentions of Gath in the El-Amarna Letters. It seems likely that Abdi-Ashirta, one of the leaders of the ‘Apiru that ebelled against the Egyptian control of Canaan, was the son of Shuwardata, king of Gath. Various findings from the site also demonstrate the importance of the site during that period, including: Two Egyptian inscriptions, Cypriot and Aegean pottery, and an Egyptian governor’s house.

The Site in the Iron Age

In the transition period from the Late Bronze Age to the Iron I period (end of the 13th century-mid-12th century BCE) the Canaanite material culture at Gath was largely replaced by the Philistine material culture which reflects the Philistine conquest of Tel es-Safi and other sites in the area which will eventually be known as “Land of the Philistines”. In the Iron I (12th-11th centuries BCE) the site was one of the two most important Philistine sites, along with Tel Miqne (Ekron). At the onset of the period only the upper city was inhabited, but over the course of the period the settlement was expanded to the lower city, and at its height the city covered an area of some 40-50 hectares. Findings from this period include decorated Philistine pottery, a temple and other structures. In the Iron IIa (1000-950 BCE) metal, oil and bone tools industries were developed at the site. To this period are ascribed a few ostraca found written in a Indo-European language with Semite letters. Other than another temple that was discovered, several cultic objects were also found such as figurines, zoomorphic vessels and horned altars. In 830 BCE Hazael king of Aram laid siege upon the city with a massive siege system uncovered during excavations, and finally conquered the city and destroyed it.

The Site in Later Periods

After the Aramean destruction, the site partially rebuilt and may have been controlled by Ashdod. In the middle of the 8th century BCE or at its end Gath came to be controlled by the Kingdom of Judah, which is reflected in Judahite pillared houses and Judahite pottery, including ‘LMLK’ jar handles. It is unknown whether the site was active during the Babylonian period (end of the 7th-mid-6th centuries BCE). The site was resettled in the Persian period (mid-6th century-332 BCE). From the Hellenistic period and onwards activity at the site dwindled dramatically.

Bibliography

A. M. Maeir and others, ‘The Late Bronze Age at Tell es-Safi/Gath and the Site’s Role in Southwestern Canaan’, in: A. M. Maeir and others (eds.), The Late Bronze and Early Iron Ages of Southern Canaan, Berlin and Boston 2019, pp. 1-18.

A. M. Maeir and others, ‘The Tell es-Sâfi/Gath Archaeological Project’, Near Eastern Archaeology 80 (2017), pp. 212-301 and Near Eastern Archeology 81 (2018), pp. 1-93.

A. M. Maeir and others, Tell es-Safi/Gath I: The 1996-2005 Seasons, Munich 2012.

The Tell es-Safi/Gath Archaeological Project Official

Gath
Mysterious 2,800-year-old Channels in Jerusalem
Mysterious 2,800-year-old Channels in Jerusalem
The connection between the kingdom of Sheba and Israel
The connection between the kingdom of Sheba and Israel
Interregional trade at Hala Sultan Tekke, Cyprus
Interregional trade at Hala Sultan Tekke, Cyprus
The reason that precipitated the collapse of the Hittite Empire
The reason that precipitated the collapse of the Hittite Empire
Tablets in the Amorite language
Tablets in the Amorite language

לוחות שנמצאו בעיראק מספקים הצצה לשפה האמורית, שממנה התפתחה העברית

The Siouan pool will open to the public
The Siouan pool will open to the public

בריכת השילוח העתיקה תיחשף במלואה מחדש

A rare treasure from the Maccabean period
A rare treasure from the Maccabean period

במדבר יהודה נחשפה עדות למרד המקבים ביוונים

A projectile from 2,200 years ago
A projectile from 2,200 years ago

קליע עופרת נדיר, הנושא כתובת מאגית ביוונית, התגלה ביבנה

The earliest sentence written in the alphabet has been discovered
The earliest sentence written in the alphabet has been discovered

המשפט התגלה על מסרק עשוי שנהב בחפירות בעיר הכנענית לכיש.

Dating using magnetic fields
Dating using magnetic fields

שיטה מהפכנית לתארוך אתרים ארכיאולוגיים בעזרת מדידה של הכיוון והעוצמה של השדה המגנטי של כדור הארץ כפי שאלה "הוקלטו" בזמן שריפת האתרים

Gihon Spring
Gihon Spring
National parks
National parks
Balaam / Deir Alla Inscription
Balaam / Deir Alla Inscription
The Broad Wall of Jerusalem
The Broad Wall of Jerusalem
Ekron Inscription
Ekron Inscription
By Oren Rozen - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=46928974

כתובת עקרון התגלתה בחפירות עקרון ב1996, בשרידיו של מקדש המתוארך לרבע הראשון של המאה ה-7 לפנה"ס, מהתקופה בה עקרון היתה ממלכת חסות של האימפריה האשורית. הכתובת, אשר התגלתה על רצפת האזור הטקסי במקדש, חרוטה על אבן גיר שמידותיה38 x 61  ס"מ ומשקלה הוא 105 ק"ג. השפה של הכתובת היא בניב פלשתי של הכתב הפיניקי.

הכתובת נחשבת לאחד הממצאים החשובים ביותר בעקרון. זהו הטקסט הראשון שזוהה כ"פלשתי" שזוהה במחקר. במהלך השנים היו חילוקי דעות במחקר הארכיאולוגי לגבי מיקומה של עקרון הפלישתית, היו שזיהו את עקרון בתל קטרה שליד גדרה או עם תל בטש, חוקר המקרא האמריקאי אדוארד רובינסון זיהה את עקרון ליד הכפר הערבי עאקיר (ועל כן המושבה מזכרת בתיה, נקראה בימי המוקדמים "עקרון"). במאה ה-19, חוקר ארץ ישראל יהוסף שוורץ טען שעקרון וקיסריה הן אותה עיר. כשהתחילה בשנות ה-80 החפירה בתל מקנה, חופרי האתר הציעו לזהותה עם עקרון. זיהוי זה נשאר שינוי במחלוקת עד למציאת הכתובת, המזכירה את "שר עקרון" ובכך נחתם הדיון המחקרי ונקבע כי תל מקנה היא אכן עקרון מהמקורות המקראיים והאשוריים.

תעתיק הכתובת. מקור: ויקיפדיה

הכתובת מזכירה חמישה משושלת מלכי עקרון לפי הסדר: אכיש, פדי, יסד, אדא ויער. המלכים אכיש ופדי מוזכרים כמלכי עקרון גם בכתובות מלכותיות אשוריות, כאשר פדי מוזכר במנסרת סנחריב המתארת את מסעו הצבאי לדיכוי המרד בארץ ב701 לפנה"ס. השם "אכיש" מופיע בספר שמואל א' כשמו של מלך גת. זוהי הפעם היחידה שבה מופיע שם של מלך פלשתי במקרא.

יש עניין רב בשמות המלכים לדיון במוצא הפלשתים. השמות פדי, יסד, אדא ויער הם שמות שמיים, אך השם אכיש הוא בעל בסיס לשוני יווני עתיק. טענה זו מהווה חיזוק לתיאוריה במחקר, על פיה מוצא הפלשתים הוא מכרתים או בערים היווניות באזור הים האגאי.

קשר אפשרי נוסף הוצע בעקבות שם האלה שלכבודה הוקדשה הכתובת וכנראה גם המקדש. הכתובת מוקדשת לאלה בשם "פתגיה אדוניתו", אלה פלשתית שלא היתה מוכרת למחקר הארכיאולוגי וההיסטורי עד לגילוי הכתובת. ישנן תאוריות רבות לגבי מקורה התרבותי של פתגיה, ויש המציעים כי מקורה בתרבות יוון. הסבר אחד הוא הדמיון בין "פתגיה" ל"גאיה", ויש חוקרים אשר הציעו לקרוא את שם האלה כ"פתניה", וכך לזהות את שמה עם שם תואר מוכר למספר אלוהויות מינואיות ומיקניות קדומות.

Siluam Inscription
Siluam Inscription

תיאור השלמת נקבת השילוח שנכתב על ידי החופרים

Gezer Calander
Gezer Calander

לוח שנה וטבלות של אותיות אלפבית, כולם בכתב עברי קדום . כתובות אלו נחשבות לכתובות העתיקות ביותר של הכתב העברי הקדום

Lachish relief
Lachish relief

סיפור כיבוש לכיש כפי שמתואר על ידי האשורים (סנחריב)

Marnpetah Stele
Marnpetah Stele

אסטלת ניצחון מצרית של פרעה מרנפתח, בנו של רעמסס השני, בשובו מאחד ממסעות הכיבוש שלו ובו מוזכר לראשונה השם ״ישראל״

Tel Dan Inscription
Tel Dan Inscription

כתובת תל דן היא כתובת ניצחון כתובה בארמית, שבה מתפאר אחד ממלכי ארם בעקבות ניצחון על ממלכת ישראל

בכתובת ישנו אזכור חוץ מקראי ראשון ל״בית דוד״

Where is ancient Jerusalem?
Where is ancient Jerusalem?

ויכוח על ראשית ימיה של ירושלים ועל השאלה מי ומתי הפך אותה לעיר מבוצרת?

"Jerubba'al" inscription
"Jerubba'al" inscription
Mt. Ebal plate
Mt. Ebal plate

לוחית העופרת המקופלת בהר עיבל היא ממצא ארכאולוגי של לוחית עופרת קטנה, ונטען לגביה כי היא מתקופת הברונזה המאוחרת, וכי כתובה עליה הכתובת העברית הקדומה ביותר שהתגלתה אי פעם

The Origins of the Philistines
The Origins of the Philistines
Was there a united monarchy?
Was there a united monarchy?

האם ישראל ויהודה היו אי פעם מאוחדות?

When did Edom emerge?
When did Edom emerge?
Late Bronze Age collapse
Late Bronze Age collapse
Hurvat Qiafa Ostracon
Hurvat Qiafa Ostracon
Ashbaal ben Bada' inscription
Ashbaal ben Bada' inscription
The location of Ciklag?
The location of Ciklag?

הצגת כל האפשרויות למיקומה של ציקלג המקראית

Israel Finkelstein
Israel Finkelstein
Yosef Garfinkel
Yosef Garfinkel
Amihai Mazar
Amihai Mazar
Oded Lipschits
Oded Lipschits
Erez Ben-Yosef
Erez Ben-Yosef
Aren Maeir
Aren Maeir
Amnon Ben Tor
Amnon Ben Tor
Yuval Gadot
Yuval Gadot
Ayelet Gilboa
Ayelet Gilboa
Alexander Fantalkin
Alexander Fantalkin
Nahum
Nehemiah
Ezra
Esther
Lamentations
Ecclesiastes
Songs of Songs
Ruth
Psalms
Malachi
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  • World’s oldest alphabet found in Syria

    25.11.24
    Archaeologists have found the world’s oldest evidence of alphabetic writing in an ancient Syrian tomb, challenging previous conceptions about the origin of alphabets.

  • Evidence how Sennacherib’s military campaign impacted the economy in the Kingdom of Judah

    09.10.24
    For the first time near Jerusalem, archeological excavation have found evidence showing the impact of Sennacherib's military campaign on the Kingdom of Judah’s economy. During Israel Antiquities Authority excavations funded by the Israel Land Authority prior to the construction of the new Mordot Arnona neighborhood revealed changes in the Judahite administration from the days of King Hezekiah in wake of the Assyrian military campaign and aftermath. Until now, evidence of the campaign which followed Judah's rebellion was known from the Judean Lowlands (Judean Shephelah).
  • “LeYehoʼezer ben Hoshʼayahu” – A rare seal from the First Temple period was Discovered in Jerusalem

    29.08.24
    An extremely rare and unusual stone seal from the First Temple period, about 2,700 years old, bearing a name inscribed in paleo-Hebrew script and a winged figure, was discovered near the Southern Wall of the Temple Mount, in the Davidson Archaeological Garden, during the excavations conducted by the
  • Who Were the Philistines? | with Archaeologist Aren Maeir, excavator of Gath of the Philistines

    14.08.24
    Mentioned throughout the Hebrew Bible as terrifying fighters, the Philistines were ancient Israel’s greatest enemy…or were they? Decades of excavation at Gath, the largest and most powerful of the Philistine cities, have shed dramatic new light on this infamous biblical people. Join us as we speak w
  • Archaeologists Uncover Jerusalem’s Monumental Fortifications

    21.07.24
    Who divided Jerusalem in two? A massive fortification discovered in the excavations of the Givati parking lot in the city of David in the National Park that circles the walls of Jerusalem solves a 150-year-old riddle
  • Discovery of ancient textile fragment sheds light on priestly garments

    18.07.24
    The 3,800-year-old fabric piece, found in caves in the Judean Desert, was colored using dye from oak scale insects, which researchers believe to be the "scarlet worm" mentioned in biblical texts.
  • When Did King Hezekiah Reign? Controversial Artifacts May Resolve Biblical Controversy

    02.07.24
    The Bible contradicts itself on the regnal years of the king of Judah who rebelled against Assyria. Study of seal impressions from the antiquities market claims to break the impasse

  • Jezreel Valley graves cast light on waning Canaanite cities, waxing Israelite monarchy

    25.05.24
    Beeswax burial ritual at Horvat Tevet site reflects lingering influence during transition from Egyptian rule 3,000 years ago, which also shaped Israelite economics and agriculture
  • Enigmatic Canaanite Tablet Turns Out to Be School Exercise, Israeli Researchers Say

    16.05.24
    Inscription found nearly a century ago in Beth Shemesh was a sequence of letters copied by a budding scribe, and reveals existence of a school there nearly 3,500 years ago

  • Giant Jars in Small Ancient Town in Israel Puzzle Archaeologists

    15.05.24
    Pithoi had been all the rage in the Bronze Age Mediterranean region, but their local manufacture stopped at the end of the Middle Bronze Age. Then it started again at Tel Burna

  • New scientific study has managed to accurately date findings from the First Temple period

    03.05.24
    A new scientific study of unprecedented scope has managed to accurately date findings from the First Temple period that were discovered in the city of David, shedding light on events mentioned in the Bible.
  • Breakthrough study dates First Temple period findings in Jerusalem

    02.05.24
    The research provides unprecedented insights into the construction activities and historical developments of ancient Jerusalem

  • Archaeologists Find Cemetery Possibly Linked to the Ancient Israelites

    28.04.24
    The burial ground at Horvat Tevet in the Jezreel Valley is a rare find from the very end of the Canaanite city-states and the birth of the biblical Kingdom of Israel more than 3,000 years ago, archaeologists say

  • Top Three Reports in Biblical Archaeology – March 2024

    04.04.24
    1. Phoenician Gold Pendant Discovered in Jerusalem
    2. Discoveries Made at Canaanite Temple at Azekah
    3. Upper Portion of a Huge Statue of Rameses II Discovered in Egypt
  • Philistines Worshipped Greek Mother Goddess, Used Drugs in Cult, Study Shows

    04.03.24
    Analysis of plant remains in temple at Gath, birthplace of the biblical giant Goliath, suggests the Philistine religion included a mix of foreign and local Canaanite rites

  • Rare Phoenician Jewel Found in Jerusalem. But Is It Linked to King Solomon?

    29.02.24
    Conservative scholars claim gold earring proves biblical story of Phoenician presence at Solomon's court. But the dating is all wrong, and the jewel may have been traded, skeptics respond
  • Hiker Finds 2,700-Year-Old Scarab Seal

    12.02.24
    Found in the Tabor Stream Nature Reserve at the foot of Tel Rekhesh, the scarab depicts a griffin and is made of carnelian. While scarab seals originated in Egypt in the fourth millenium BCE, the particular iconography of the seal is similar to Assyrian seals from the eighth century, shortly before the Neo-Assyrian Empire conquered the Northern Kingdom of Israel. It is possible the seal was a family heirloom that traveled with an Assyrian administrator to Israel after the conquest, as it was common for a son to continue using the seal of his father or grandfather.
  • Long-lost Phoenician figurines could reveal secrets to ancient cult

    08.02.24
    A treasure trove of Phoenician figurines and ceramic vessels – that sat in the storerooms of the National Maritime Museum in Haifa for decades – were rediscovered three years ago, when three archeologists from the University of Haifa examined them and realized they held important clues about the religious and social life of the Phoenicians who sailed the waters of the Mediterranean and beyond.
  • Unique 5,000-year-old Pots Found at Biblical Gezer in 1934 Are Finally Revealed

    21.01.24
    Almost a century after the British archaeologist Alan Rowe excavated Gezer, Dr. Samuel Wolff published a final report on the site, including on three vessels whose use defies interpretation

  • Israeli Archaeologists Find Half of Very Early Coin Near Jerusalem

    17.01.24
    The coin from 2,550 years ago, found in a First Temple-era home by Jerusalem, had been bisected, suggesting it was relegated to pre-money status of paying by weight in silver

  • New technology interprets archaeological findings from Biblical times

    04.01.24
    A breakthrough achieved by researchers from four Israeli universities—Tel Aviv University, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Bar-Ilan University and Ariel University—will enable archaeologists to identify burnt materials discovered in excavations and estimate their firing temperatures.

  • (A1) Introductory chapters, Introduction

    13.02.24
    Part A: Introductory chapters

    The biblical story of the history of the Kingdom of Judah, as told in the books of Joshua, Judges, Samuel and Kings, describes the point of view of the Jerusalem elite: what it knew, what it wanted to tell and what served its political, religious and economic interests
  • Bethsaida from 3,000 years ago and the alliance between David & King Geshur

    12.12.23
    In this video I will focus on the history of Bethsaida, its location, the impressive city wall and gate, and the kingdom of Geshur with an emphasis on its relationship with the kingdoms of Judah and Israel until the Assyrian conquest
  • Archaeologists Bewildered by Monumental Moat That Split Biblical Jerusalem in Two

    12.12.23
    Israeli archaeologists have found a huge ditch carved into the rock that may have split ancient Jerusalem in two 3,000 years ago, with the elites on one side and the rest on the other. Why is another question

  • Bible Evidence Unearthed at Nineveh!

    02.12.23
    Join Joel as he goes to Nineveh, modern-day Mosul in Iraq, and tells the story of the archaeological discovery unearthed there which linked evidence from the dirt with the Bible's account of Hezekiah, Sennacherib, and the Assyrian conquest.
  • New Discovery Changes Story of King Hazael’s Attack on Biblical Gath

    18.10.23
    The Philistines of Gath were thought to be outliers in the Levant in building with Mesopotamia-style fired bricks. But what baked the bricks at Tell es-Safi wasn’t a kiln

  • What Matters Now to archaeologist Erez Ben-Yosef: King David’s tent-dwelling monarchy

    29.09.23
    The Tel Aviv University professor proposes that just because early Israelite kings were nomadic doesn’t mean they didn’t control complex societies. ‘Look at Genghis Khan’
  • What Role did Samaria play in Ancient Times?

    02.09.23
  • Archaeologists Find Mysterious 2,800-year-old Channels Near Temple Mount in Jerusalem

    30.08.23
    Deep grooves cut into the bedrock date to the biblical Kingdom of Judah, and bolster the theory of Jerusalem’s early expansion. But what purpose they served remains a riddle

  • Archaeologist Excited by Recent Finds in Ancient Shiloh, Biblical Site of Ark, Tabernacle

    30.08.23
    SHILOH, Samaria – Several years ago, CBN News first reported on exciting discoveries from the excavation site at ancient Shiloh.

    The book of Judges in the Bible tells us Shiloh was a significant place in the history of the Israelites when they came into the Promised Land.

  • Archaeologist Excited by Recent Finds in Ancient Shiloh, Biblical Site of Ark, Tabernacle

    30.08.23
    SHILOH, Samaria – Several years ago, CBN News first reported on exciting discoveries from the excavation site at ancient Shiloh.

    The book of Judges in the Bible tells us Shiloh was a significant place in the history of the Israelites when they came into the Promised Land.

  • Leading archaeologist who dug with Yigael Yadin at Masada and Hazor dies at 88

    24.08.23
    Amnon Ben-Tor, who won the Israel Prize in 2019, spent decades on major biblical-era site, lectured in top universities around the world

  • The Rather Stunning Backlash Against Professor Garfinkel’s Latest Paper on the Kingdom of David

    23.08.23
    Is the criticism warranted? And why the level of vehemence?

    By Christopher Eames
  • In northern Israel, massive 3,800-year-old monument stuns and stumps archaeologists

    17.08.23
    The size of an Olympic swimming pool, with vaulted ceilings that raise the topographical height of Tel Shimron by 5 meters, the delicate mud brick structure was likely barely used
  • Israeli Archaeologist Claims He Has Found David’s Kingdom, but Fellow Researchers Cry Foul

    31.07.23
    Prof. Yossi Garfinkel thinks a ring of fortified towns around Jerusalem proves David ruled over a substantial kingdom, but colleagues say those settlements may have nothing to do with ancient Judah

  • A Day in the Life at Abel Beth Maacah

    24.07.23
    A dig volunteer shares her story

  • King David’s Nomadic Kingdom

    19.07.23
    Mari as a model for ancient Judah
  • Israeli Archaeologists Enlist Cosmic Rays to Unveil Underground Secrets of Jerusalem

    02.07.23
    Using method pioneered in studying the pyramids, researchers hope subatomic particles from outer space can reveal unknown underground voids, including near the flashpoint Temple Mount

  • Archaeologists Discover Secret to the Prosperity of the Biblical Kingdom of Israel

    26.06.23
    An ancient factory producing ‘royal purple’ dye is revealed to have been a joint Israelite-Phoenician venture that cornered the market for one of world’s oldest luxury goods

  • Web of biblical cities depicts King David as major ruler, says Israeli archaeologist

    26.06.23
    Hebrew University professor claims evidence around Jerusalem supports David as no mere shepherd chieftain; critics accuse him of oversimplification, calling theory a fish story
  • Ancient Tel Shikmona factory probably supplied the First Temple with dye

    20.06.23
    A new study by the University of Haifa claims to completely change the story of the biblical Shikmona.
  • Pinpointing the Ancient Core of Jerusalem

    16.06.23
    Today we reflect on a new article supporting a theory that attempts to relocate the hill where ancient Jerusalem was founded
    CHANDLER COLLINS
  • DOES 2,800-YEAR-OLD STATUE HEAD DEPICT A FORGOTTEN BIBLICAL KING?

    10.06.23
    Archaeologists are in the midst of a mystery of forgotten identity. They are trying to discover the name behind a 2,800-year-old face found in the ancient city of Abel Beth Maacah in northern Israel.

  • King David’s Jerusalem Wasn’t Where We Thought, New Study Argues

    09.06.23
    Analysis of 3,500-year-old artifacts offers first concrete evidence for a surprising theory: the “City of David” ridge was not where the biblical town first arose
  • Dead Sea Scrolls Discovery: Amazing Hike to Cave 1, Qumran Tour, The Essenes, Proof Bible Is True!

    23.05.23
    Learn the incredible facts about the Dead Sea Scrolls at Qumran. Take a hike up to Cave 1, where all the discoveries began, and experience it for yourself. We'll cover everything you need to know in this exciting and adventuristic video. Also, learn why the Bible we have today is the same as the one discovered here over 2000 years ago and why you can trust it.
  • Academic article on controversial 3,200-year-old ‘curse tablet’ fails to sway experts

    14.05.23
    Year after team hails bombshell discovery of oldest Hebrew writing in Israel, details of the find hit a peer-reviewed journal. But some academics don’t see any inscription at all
  • “You are Cursed by the God YHW:” an early Hebrew inscription from Mt. Ebal

    12.05.23
    The long-awaited peer-reviewed paper on the Mount Ebal Curse Tablet has been published!
    This find may be the earliest-known written name of the Hebrew God
  • Who Were the Philistines, and Where Did They Come From?

    16.04.23
    Investigating the biblical and archaeological evidence for the Philistines’ origins

  • Extreme drought ended one of the ancient world’s greatest empires

    29.03.23
    Wood from the tomb of King Midas’ father shows how a rainfall shortage and widespread famine could have wiped out the Hittite civilization
  • The Rise and Fall Of Ancient Israel - Prof. Israel Finkelstein. Ep 8: The Philistines in the Bible

    26.03.23
    The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel is a series of in-depth conversations about the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel with Prof. Israel Finkelstein and Dr. Matthew J. Adams.
  • The Rise and Fall Of Ancient Israel - Prof. Israel Finkelstein. Ep 7: The Early Philistines

    04.03.23
    The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel is a series of in-depth conversations about the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel with Prof. Israel Finkelstein and Dr. Matthew J. Adams.

    Episode 7: The Early Philistines

    The Rise and Fall Of Ancient Israel - All Episodes
    https://youtube.com/playlist?li
  • The Emergence of Edom: Recent Debate

    01.03.23
    By Piotr Bienkowski
    Did the Iron Age kingdom of Edom emerge in the 10th century BCE from a nomadic polity that developed sophisticated copper production and social complexity, or was it formed much later, in the late 8th century BCE, as a result of the impact of the Assyrian empire on settlement, agriculture, and trade?

  • The Rise and Fall Of Ancient Israel - Prof. Israel Finkelstein. Ep6: The Conquest of Canaan

    25.02.23
    The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel is a series of in-depth conversations about the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel with Prof. Israel Finkelstein and Dr. Matthew J. Adams.

    Episode 6: The Conquest of Canaan

    The Rise and Fall Of Ancient Israel - All Episodes
    https://youtube.com/playlist?l
  • The Rise and Fall Of Ancient Israel - Prof. Israel Finkelstein. Ep5: The First Israel

    24.02.23
    The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel is a series of in-depth conversations about the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel with Prof. Israel Finkelstein and Dr. Matthew J. Adams.

    Episode 5: The First Israel

    The Rise and Fall Of Ancient Israel - All Episodes
    https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL
  • "The untold story of "Solomon's Temple" at Tel Moza"

    20.02.23
    An episode from Tel-Aviv University's podcast: Tel-Aviv 360: The Podcast After the Untold Story of the Kingdom of Judah. Episode 29: The untold story of "Solomon's Temple" at Tel Moza. By professor Oded Lipschits. (In Hebrew)

    The accidental and exciting discovery of a temple that existed through the First Temple period, only 7 km. away from Jerusalem, creates a unique and rare window to the way first-millennium temples worked and developed. It existed parallel to the temple, that according to the biblical description, existed, worked, and developed, at the capital of the Judean Kingdom. Following the processes of change and development of in the Moza temple during the hundreds of years it was used, allows a possible archaeological comparison point for the processes of development of the temple in Jerusalem, which is known only from the biblical description. More than that, the archaeological research of the temple at Moza allows the investigation of the relationship between the two communities living around the two temples: the community living in the Moza Valley, the temple at Moza being its central religious centre, and the nearby community which lived in and near Jerusalem, which Solomon’s temple, built at the height of Temple Mount, was its central religious centre.
  • Interregional trade at Hala Sultan Tekke, Cyprus: Analysis and chronology of imports

    20230215
  • Kedesh - a biblical city

    14.02.23
    We are in the biblical settlement of Kedesh, which is in the territory allocated to the tribe of Naphtali over 3000 years ago. Since there are several other places in the Bible that are named Kadesh, in this video I review the different places so that we can identify the settlement that actually res
  • The Rise and Fall Of Ancient Israel - Prof. Israel Finkelstein. Ep4: Rise in the Highlands

    09.02.23
    The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel is a series of in-depth conversations about the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel with Prof. Israel Finkelstein and Dr. Matthew J. Adams.

    Episode 4: The Rise of Ancient Israel in the Highlands
  • The Rise and Fall Of Ancient Israel - Prof. Israel Finkelstein. Ep3: The Bronze Age Collapse

    05.02.23
    The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel is a series of in-depth conversations about the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel with Prof. Israel Finkelstein and Dr. Matthew J. Adams.
    Episode 3: The Late Bronze Age Collapse
  • Netiv Ha-‘Asara

    05.02.23
    Volume 135 Year 2023 Yael Abadi-Reiss
  • The Septuagint - The Bible translation that paved the way to Christianity. Prof. James Aitken

    04.02.23
    Professor James Aitken gives us an in-depth introduction of The Septuagint, also known as the Greek Old Testament. The translation of the Bible to Greek was a long and continuous effort of Greek speaking Egyptian Jews, starting in the 3rd century BCE, in Egypt.
  • Tree Rings, Drought, and the Collapse of the Hittite Empire

    01.02.23
    By Eric Cline
  • The Rise And Fall Of Ancient Israel - Prof. Israel Finkelstein E1: The View from the Center

    30.01.23
    The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel is a series of in-depth conversations about the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel with Prof. Israel Finkelstein and Dr. Matthew J. Adams.

    Episode One: Introduction: The View from the Center

  • The Rise And Fall Of Ancient Israel - Prof. Israel Finkelstein E2: The Bronze Age, Before Israel

    30.01.23
    The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel is a series of in-depth conversations about the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel with Prof. Israel Finkelstein and Dr. Matthew J. Adams.
    Episode Two: The Bronze Age, the Land before Israel
  • Tel Lachish: Vital Fortified City, Last City Conquered by Assyrian Invasion, Jerusalem Saved by God

    28.01.23
    Lachish is regarded as the second most important city after Jerusalem in the Southern Kingdom of Judah and was strategically located on the Via Maris travel route. It was the last city conquered by the Assyrians before they set their sites on Jerusalem. However, God had other plans and supernaturall
  • Mysterious Lost Sunken City: 9,000-Year-Old Settlement of Atlit-Yam | Ancient Architects

    27.01.23
    This is a late Pre-Pottery Neolithic B site, although some classify it as Pre-Pottery Neolithic C, with continuous occupation dating from 9,400 to around 8,000 years ago. It’s a large fishing village, a permanent settlement now lying 9-12 metres below sea level, off the coast of Israel, 10km south of Haifa, in the North Bay of the town of Atlit.
  • Excavating The City Of Goliath - Prof. Maeir & Prof. Chadwick

    22.01.23
    Lately, we paid a short visit to the millennia old city, known throughout the Iron Age, as well as the Hebrew Bible, as Gath - the city of Goliath.
    The excavation team has kindly invited us to see how archeology is done from ground level.
  • This is the Oldest Sentence in the World's First Alphabet - New Archeological Finding

    13.01.23
    The archeologist, Prof. Yosef Garfinkel of the Hebrew University, presents his exciting new finding: the earliest known sentence written in the first Alphabet. The sentence is incised on an ivory comb.

    Prof. Yosef Garfinkel and his colleagues unearthed the comb at the archaeological site of Lachis
  • A Virtual Visit to Tel Dan

    02.01.23
    Anyone who’d like to visit the archaeological site of Tel Dan without actually traveling to northern Israel—and who wants to be shown around by a renowned expert who died 14 years ago—can now do so thanks to the wonders of virtual reality.

  • David and Solomon’s Invisible Kingdom | An Interview with Archaeologist Erez Ben Yosef

    24.05.23
    Was ancient Israel’s United Monarchy a semi-nomadic kingdom that is now largely invisible to modern archaeology? Some archaeologists think so. To better understand this theory, BAR Assistant Editor Nathan Steinmeyer visited the Timna excavations in southern Israel to talk with director Erez Ben-Yose
  • CURSED! The Mount Ebal Curse Tablet (Part Three): Digging for Truth Episode 202

    15.05.23
    Dr. Scott Stripling joins us in the studio to discuss the most important archaeological discovery in the history of Associates for Biblical Research: the Mount Ebal Curse Tablet. In part three, we discuss the proto-alphabetic script and the implications for the date of the Exodus and the authorship
  • Pool of Siloam excavation update May 2023

    12.05.23
    After years of waiting to excavate the larger area around the Pool of Siloam, archaeologists are dealing with a major disappointment. The rest of the pool didn't show up in the first months of digging! That's the reality of digging up the past. Here's a short video that explains why the rest of the
  • CURSED! The Mount Ebal Curse Tablet (Part Two): Digging for Truth Episode 201

    08.05.23
    In Part Two, Dr. Scott Stripling joins us in the studio again to discuss the most important archaeological discovery in the history of Associates for Biblical Research: the Mount Ebal Curse Tablet. We'll discuss wet sifting, curse tablets, the origin of the lead, what the tablet reads, and its impli
  • CURSED! The Mount Ebal Curse Tablet (Part One): Digging for Truth Episode 200

    01.05.23
    Dr. Scott Stripling joins us in the studio to discuss the most important archaeological discovery in the history of Associates for Biblical Research: the Mount Ebal Curse Tablet. Over these four episodes, we’ll discuss the background of the discovery, the importance of Mt. Ebal, the context in which
  • Israel's United Monarchy - Oldest Stories Podcast

    26.04.23
    Today we look at the lead up to King Saul, and how Israel made the transition from a collections of tribes to a unified kingship. Why is the Old Testament so ambivalent on the matter of kingship? Most interestingly, there is a universally applicable political lesson here, in what may be history's ea
  • Joshua's Conquest of Canaan (Part Two): Digging for Truth Episode 199

    24.04.23
    Dr. Jonathan Moore joins us again for part two of our discussion about Joshua’s Conquest of Canaan. We’ll be talking about the city of Ai, the Mount Ebal Curse Tablet, the destruction of Hazor, and ABR’s dig at Shiloh. Don't miss it!
  • Joshua's Conquest of Canaan (Part One): Digging for Truth Episode 198

    17.04.23
    Dr. Jonathan Moore joins us for a two-part episode on Joshua’s Conquest of Canaan. He will provide us with an overview of the Israelite entrance into the land of Promise. He’ll also be outlining the archaeological evidence connected to the destruction of Jericho in Joshua 6. Don’t miss these topics
  • Sabaean Inscription Points to Connections between King Solomon’s Israel and Kingdom of Sheba

    04.04.23
    Archaeologists deciphered the Sabaean inscription on a clay jar finds link between King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba.

    Archaeologists deciphered a partially preserved inscription that was found on the neck of a large jar dated back to the time of King Solomon.

    Dr. Daniel Vainstub of the Hebrew Un
  • Episode 12: Tel Dan

    28.03.23
    The ancient ruins of Tel Dan are located at the North of Israel and surrounded by riverbeds, springs, hiking trails and picnic areas.
    The city of Dan is named after one of the twelve tribes of Israel and among these original ruins of the city dated from the First Temple period are the city gate, the
  • Pool of Siloam update March 2023

    17.03.23
    Here's the very latest from the Pool of Siloam excavations in Jerusalem. Archaeologist Ismail Kanan shares insight, on location!
  • Who is Yahweh - How a Warrior-Storm God became the God of the Israelites and World Monotheism

    03.03.23
    How did a warrior-storm god become Yahweh, the god of world Abrahamic monotheism? By tracing the earliest history of Yahweh ("The One Exists") to his origins in the area around Mt Seir to his immigration during the Bronze Age Collapse to the Judea Highlands around Shiloh, this episode explores the e
  • Excavation of the Entire Siloam Pool Begins

    15.02.23
    Talking with the City of David Foundation about an excavation two decades in the making.

    In 2004, a portion of the largest ritual bath in Jerusalem was discovered in the southern part of the City of David. This pool is mentioned in the book of John as the location of the healing of a man who was bl
  • Touring the Bible’s Buried Cities: Gezer

    05.02.23
    Tel Gezer is one of the most important sites in biblical archaeology. Gezer is a city mentioned several times throughout the Bible, and the ancient site boasts a long history of excavation and remarkable discoveries paralleling the biblical account. On today’s show, host Christopher Eames takes you
  • Tel Kinrot and Khirbet Minim. Walk near Lake Kinneret, Israel

    01.02.23
    Tel Kinrot and Khirbet Minim(Khirbat al-Minya, Horvat Minya). Walk near Lake Kinneret(Kineret, Sea of Galilee), Israel
    The first part of the video shows what the excavation of the Tel Kinrot mound looks like. More information can be seen at the link to an article with good and detailed text on this
  • Episode 4: Tel Azekah

    12.01.23
    Throwing a stone in a sling is all it took David to defeat Goliath. 2000 years later, we're still discussing the story and using that phrase, but where did it happen? Right here, in Tel Azekah.

    For more information regarding the Holy Land click here- https://holyland.israel.travel/
  • Prof. Oded Lipschits (University of Tel-Aviv)

    09.01.23
    "Those who live in these ruins in the land of Israel" (Ez. 33:24): Some Thoughts on Living in the Shadow of the Ruins in Persian Period Judah
  • Who Wrote the Pentateuch? Prof. Konrad Schmid and Prof. Israel Knohl

    07.01.23
    Who really wrote the Pentateuch? This central question for modern Biblical studies is heavily debated among scholars.
    In this episode two of the most prominent Hebrew Bible scholars: Prof. Konrad Schmid and Prof. Israel Knohl, meet to discuss the big questions of their field.
    A rare dialogue betwe
  • Ancient coins from Maccabean period discovered

    13.12.22
    This is the earliest archaeological evidence that caves in the Judean Desert were used by the Maccabees

  • Rare 'sling bullet' from Hasmonean period found in Yavne dig

    08.12.22
    A rare item found while clearing land for a building project may have been used by the Greek army in their battles with the Maccabees.
  • The Fall of the Bronze Age and the Destruction that Wasn’t

    05.12.22
    By Jesse Millek
  • When did Judaism begin? Prof. Yonatan Adler - The Origins of Judaism [4K]

    30.11.22
    "When did Judaism begin?" is not a naive question. Every answer to this question would require presenting an acceptable definition of Judaism. Not an easy task. There are many definitions. Most (or all) of them are the subjects of fierce and never ending debates.
  • Gale Lecture: "New Light on the Archaeology of Jerusalem in the 7th Century BCE" Dr. Oded Lipschits

    15.11.22
    n 701 BCE, the Assyrian King Sennacherib led a destructive military campaign against the Kingdom of Judah. Jerusalem, its capital, was not destroyed. For this reason, the archaeology of Jerusalem and its surroundings has no "chronological anchor" that can distinguish between the days of Ahaz and Hezekiah (late 8th century BCE) and the days of King Manasseh (first half of the 7th century BCE). New excavations, new finds, and new tools recently developed in archaeological research now make it possible to illuminate the "archeology of the days of Manasseh" and learn about the history of Jerusalem during this long and important period of Judah's subjugation to Assyrian imperial rule.
  • Bringing Azekah’s Walls into the Light

    07.09.22
    Bruno Barros, 2022 G.E. Wright/Shirlee Meyers Fellowship Recipient

  • Investigating the mystery of the ancient temple in Tel Moza

    31.08.22
    Finds from Tel Moza near Jerusalem point to a temple from the first temple period which resembles Solomon's temple as it is narrated in the bible. In Hebrew.
  • Digging In: Tel Shimron. - Tales from an untouched archaeological gold mine

    22.08.22
    Tel Shimron is one of the largest sites in one of the most important and fertile regions for biblical archaeology—the Jezreel Valley in northern Israel. With a history that stretches from the late Neolithic period (c. 5500 B.C.E.) up to the modern day, the city of Shimron was extremely influential
  • The Khirbet Qeiyafa Ostracon

    06.07.22
    A New Collation Based on the Multispectral Images, with Translation and Commentary
  • Let there be God: How Yahweh became “God Almighty”

    28.06.22
    In the Canaan religion, Yahweh was a lesser god, who was assigned the land of Israel. Here's how he became "God Almighty."
  • "And Rehoboam built ... Lachish"

    24.06.22
    On today’s program, host Brent Nagtegaal goes to Tel Lachish to talk with excavation director Prof. Yosef Garfinkel about his team’s discoveries at the site from the time of Rehoboam, as well as preview his new excavations set to begin on June 26, 2022.

  • Battle of Qarqar

    13.06.22
    The Battle of Qarqar was fought in 853 BC when the army of the Neo-Assyrian Empire led by Emperor Shalmaneser III encountered an allied army of eleven kings at Qarqar led by Hadadezer who is possibly identified with King Benhadad II of Aram-Damascus; and Ahab, king of Israel.

    Check out our other ch
  • Prof. Aren M. Maeir - Whatever happened to the Philistines?!

    03.05.22
    Our guest, Aren Maeir is an American-born Israeli archaeologist and professor at Bar Ilan University. He is director of the Tell es-Safi/Gath Archaeological Project.
  • 1177 B.C. - The Collapse of the Bronze Age civilizations - Eric H. Cline

    20.03.22
    In 1177 B.C., marauding groups known only as the "Sea Peoples" invaded Egypt. The pharaoh's army and navy managed to defeat them, but the victory so weakened Egypt that it soon slid into decline, as did most of the surrounding civilizations. After centuries of brilliance,
  • Was John the Baptist buried here? A visit to the ancient Byzantine church of Sebastia, Samaria

    19.02.22
  • Tel Rehov and the Phoenicians: The Movie Demo Reel

    13.02.22
    Tel Rehov and the Phoenicians: The Movie Demo Reel with Archaeologists Amihai Mazar and Nava Panitz-Cohen with rare footage of pottery vessels from the Hebrew University Tel Rehov pottery archive and pottery room.

    The Phoenicians were once considered a lost civilization even though their influence
  • Biblical City of Ziklag Where Philistines Gave Refuge to future King David Found, Researchers Claim

    22.01.22
    Information about Tel al-Rai, identified as Ziklag itself will be provided after this announcement.

    Unfortunately, I have not been able to work as a tour guide as from Feb 2020
    Should you wish to support me and my videos please subscribe to my channel and let me guide you through the Holy Land via
  • First evidence in the Judean Desert for the Maccabean Revolt against the Seleucid Kingdom

    13.12.22
    First evidence in the Judean Desert for the Maccabean Revolt against the Greek Seleucid Kingdom
    A rare wooden box containing a small hoard of 15 silver coins dating to the reign of Antiochos IV was discovered in an excavation in the Darageh Stream Nature Reserve, overlooking the Dead Sea

    *A refugee
  • Excavating Biblical Ziklag/Khirbet el-Rai | Lecture

    05.12.22
    Dr. Yosef Garfinkel presented “Excavating Biblical Ziklag/Khirbetel-Rai” as part of the Lynn H. Wood Archaeological Museum Lecture Series at Southern Adventist University on November 7, 2022.

    Professor Yosef Grafinkel is Israel’s leading archaeologist and head of the Institute of Archaeology at the
  • ‘David at Shaaraim and Ziklag’: Prof. Yosef Garfinkel Speaks at Armstrong Auditorium

    28.11.22
    Hebrew University biblical archaeology professor Yosef Garfinkel visited the Herbert W. Armstrong College campus and Armstrong Institute of Biblical Archaeology headquarters in Edmond, Oklahoma, from November 9 through 11 while on a tour of the United States. He delivered a lecture to around 200 Arm
  • Gale Lecture: "New Light on the Archaeology of Jerusalem in the 7th Century BCE" Dr. Oded Lipschits

    15.11.22
    In 701 BCE, the Assyrian King Sennacherib led a destructive military campaign against the Kingdom of Judah. Jerusalem, its capital, was not destroyed. For this reason, the archaeology of Jerusalem and its surroundings has no "chronological anchor" that can distinguish between the days of Ahaz and He
  • King Hezekiah’s Monumental Jerusalem Inscription

    03.11.22
    And a new tool in biblical archaeology: archaeomagnetism

    SHOW NOTES: https://armstronginstitute.org/791-king-hezekiahs-monumental-jerusalem-inscription

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    EMAIL UPDATES: https://pcog.activehosted.com/f/32
  • The Mesha Stele: Artifact Deep Dive

    03.11.22
    The Mesha Stele is an incredibly artifact which was found at the site of Dibon in modern Jordan. It is the longest narrative historical text found in the Iron Age Levant to date. It has a fascinating story of discovery and offers important insights into ancient Moab, it's king Mesha, Moabite theolog
  • New excavations at Ashkelon, "southern gateway" to the Holy Land

    17.10.22
    The city of Ashkelon lies in southern Israel, overlooking the sea, a few kilometers from the Gaza Strip. It has always been a crucial junction on the route to and from Egypt, a strip of land where peoples and cultures have alternated.

    RAFAEL LEWIS
    @UniversityofHaifa
    “Tel Ashkelon is considered to
  • Digging In: Tel Azekah - Unearthing a remarkable biblical site

    14.10.22
    Located along a strategic roadway in the Elah Valley, between the coastal plain and the highlands, Azekah was an important settlement for thousands of years and the location of many conflicts recorded in both the Bible and historical sources.

    Find out more here: https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/
  • The Moabite Stone | (Mesha Stele)

    14.10.22
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  • 3300 Y.O. traces of hallucinogen discovered in the Levant

    24.09.22
    ____________________________________________________

    Traces of opium discovered in a 3300-y.o tomb in Israel! What was it used for, and what does it say about the history of drug use in the Levant?

    For more news from ISRAEL visit: www.iltv.tv
    ___________________________________________________

    Jo
  • A Rare and Prestigious Collection of Decorated Ivories from the First Temple Period Found

    07.09.22
    An extraordinary discovery was unearthed in Jerusalem: an assemblage of ivory plaques from the First Temple period, among the few found anywhere in the world, and the first of their kind to be found in Jerusalem. They came to light in the excavations of the Israel Antiquities Authority and Tel Aviv
  • Legend of the Amorites - ROBERT SEPEHR

    25.08.22
    The Amorites were an ancient people from the Levant who also occupied large parts of southern Mesopotamia from the 21st century BC to the end of the 17th century BC, where they established several prominent city-states in existing locations, most notably Babylon, which was raised from a small town t
  • Jericho Unearthed: The Archaeology of Jericho Explained

    12.08.22
    The experts agree--the city walls of Jericho fell down. But does archaeology agree with the Biblical account of Joshua and Jericho? Watch this video as Joel interviews key archaeologists and explains the archaeology of Jericho.

    JOEL'S BOOK - Where God Came Down: The Archaeological Evidence
    ► http
  • The Rise and Fall of the Hittites in Ancient Anatolia

    15.07.22
    The Hittites were an Indo-European culture that occupied the region of Ancient Anatolia, also known as Asia Minor and today is the region of Turkey. The Hittites expanded their territories from their capital at Hattusa, and ended up consolidating the Hittite Empire which both rivalled and threatene
  • Israele: scoperti resti riconducibili agli Shardana

    06.07.22
    Sembra incredibile ma le prove archeologiche sembrano oramai dimostrarlo ogni ragionevole dubbio. Prima di addentrarci in questa nuova e affascinante scoperta facciamo però una breve digressione per capire chi siano stati i Popoli del Mare e gli Shardana.
    La rivelazione e la conferma sono arrivate r
  • A visit to the oldest city in the world - the story of ancient Jericho (Tel Jericho /Tell es-Sultan)

    23.06.22
    Information about ancient Jericho (Tell Jericho / Tell es-Sultan) itself will be provided after this announcement.



    Should you wish to support me and my videos please subscribe to my channel and let me guide you through the Holy Land via my videos. In this way, I will be able to continue to do my
  • Why Israel’s Silver Scrolls Are a Bible Archaeology BREAKTHROUGH | Watchman Newscast

    06.06.22
    On today's Watchman Newscast, host Erick Stakelbeck and top Israeli archaeologist and tour guide Danny "The Digger" Herman explore Ketef Hinnom in Jerusalem, the site of one of Israel’s most important archaeological discoveries, the SILVER SCROLLS. This stunning artifact bears the oldest surviving B
  • Modern Archaeology in Ancient Jerusalem: A Tour with TAU Prof. Oded Lipschits

    22.05.22
    See what happens when modern physics and archaeology meet and the limitless possibilities this interdisciplinary collaboration offers humanity.
  • The life-saving lesson of Bet Shemesh

    20.05.22
    When the Ark of the Covenant arrived unexpectedly in Bet Shemesh, the people of that town made a tragic mistake. The message from the ruins of this biblical site still rings true today.
  • The house of the Egyptian governor - Tel Afek

    11.05.22
  • Archaeological excavations in Old Jaffa - Jaffa

    04.05.22
  • Merneptah Stele, Cairo Museum: Egyptologist & OT scholar James Hoffmeier; Proof of Israel in Canaan

    07.04.22
    The Merneptah Stele (Cairo 34025) found in the Museum of Egyptian Antiquities, Cairo, Egypt, is commented upon by leading Egyptologist, Biblical and Old Testament scholar, and evangelical Christian Dr. James Hoffmeier. Early Israel’s presence in the land of Canaan is validated by this stela. Pharaoh
  • Ekron Royal Dedicatory Inscription - Biblical Epigraphy (7th Century BCE)

    03.04.22
    EKRON ROYAL DEDICATORY INSCRIPTION
    𒀭
    Discovered in 1996 at Tel Miqne (Biblical Ekron, one of the Philistine Pentapolis), inside the inner shrine of an Iron Age II (7th Century BCE) temple, which was destroyed by Babylonian King Nebuhadnezar II in 604 BCE).
    This monumental inscription serves as ch
  • LOVELY ISRAEL - Relaxing Walk in the beautiful Ashdod Yam Fort on the Mediterranean coast of ASHDOD

    03.04.22
    Ashdod-Yam ("Ashdod on the Sea" in Hebrew) is an archaeological site on the Mediterranean coast of Israel. It is located in the southern part of the modern city of Ashdod. Ashdod on the Sea and Ashdod were for most of their history two separate entities, connected though by close ties with each othe
  • Boaz Gross Explains the Tel Bet Shemesh East Salvage Excavation in Israel | Bible & Archaeology

    28.02.22
    Dr. Robert Cargill, Editor of Bible & Archaeology, interviews Boaz Gross, the Director of the Tel Bet Shemesh East Salvage Excavation in Israel, and the Vice President of the Israeli Institute of Archaeology. They discuss the archaeological dig at Tel Bet Shemesh, the wonderful discoveries made ther
  • Sebastia (Samaria) - A visit to the capital of the Kingdom of Israel (Omri, Ahab, Jezebel, Elijah)

    26.02.22
    Information about Sebastia (Samaria) itself will be provided after this announcement.

    Unfortunately, I have not been able to work as a tour guide as from Feb 2020
    Should you wish to support me and my videos please subscribe to my channel and let me guide you through the Holy Land via my videos. In
  • Tel Dan Inscription: How important is it? (Biblical Archaeology)

    15.02.22
    The Tel Dan discovery: What is it and How it impacted the debate about the Historicity of the Bible?

    The House of David Inscription, sometimes known as the Tel Dan inscription was uncovered at Tel Dan, an ancient city in northern Israel. In the Bible, the city was best known as Dan.

    The writer of
  • The Kurkh Stele of Shalmaneser III and Evidence for King Ahab of Israel and Benhadad of Syria

    07.01.22
    This 2 metre tall limestone stele created by king Shalmaneser III of Assyria which (amongst other things) commemorates the battle of Qarqar in 583 BC helps to provide historical evidence for the powerful and wealthy biblical kings Ahab of Israel and Benhadad of Syria. Watch now to find out how…

    Ple
  • The ancient secrets revealed by deciphered tablets | BBC Ideas

    06.01.22
    Cuneiform is the earliest known form of writing. For thousands of years, no one was able to translate it. When it was finally cracked, it gave us some astonishing insights into the ancient world...

    Made by Jist Studios.
    Made in partnership with The Open University.

    Based on the BBC Radio 4 program
  • In the News: Timna's Archeological Find

    06.12.21
    A recent discovery at Israel's Timna Park sheds new light on the Bible, and may change the face of Archeology. Erez Ben-Yosef, Prof. of Archeology at Tel Aviv U & Head of the Timna Archeological Expeditions, shares the exciting news. With Shahar Azani.
  • Lachish and the Early Kingdom of Judah: Digging for Truth Episode 143

    06.09.21
    Archaeologist Dr. Michael Hasel join us to talk about the city of Lachish. Dr. Hasel is the Co-Director of the Fourth Expedition to Lachish. Destroyed by the Assyrians in 701 BC, Lachish was second most important city in Judah after Jerusalem and is of great importance in the formation of Judah at t
  • Tel Mevorakh - Reports from Latest Excavations

    16.08.21
  • Archaeologist Prof. Ben-Tor Talks about how Excavations at Hazor Validate Bible Stories About it

    20210623
    The ancient city of Hazor is mentioned in the Bible as the "Head" of the Canaanite kingdoms when the Israelites began to conquer the Promised Land (Joshua 11:10). The Bible tells us that under the courageous leader of Joshua, the city was destroyed and burned with fire. But what do the archaeological remains at Hazor tell us about its destruction?
  • The Last Stand of the Philistines: Archaeologists Find Clue to the Fall of Gath

    29.05.21
    When the Aramean king laid siege to biblical Gath 2,800 years ago, the defenders resorted to desperate measures, including, it seems, making flimsy arrowheads out of bone
  • Professor Assaf Yasur-Landau - Dor Port as an Example of Under-water Research of Iron Age Ports

    06.04.21
    Diving into the Past: The Past of Men and Sea
    Departmental seminar 2020/2021
    A series of lectures organized by the Student Council and the department of the Land of Israel studies and archaeology in Bar-Ilan University.
    Professor Assaf Yasur-Landau's (The Department of Maritime Civilizations, University of Haifa) lecture on the topic of Dor Port as an example of the under-water research of Iron Age ports.

  • 82. King Solomon’s Mines: History or Legend with Prof. Erez Ben-Yosef of Tel Aviv University. 3/30

    02.04.21
    82. Live Zoom Presentation: "King Solomon’s Mines: History or Legend with Prof. Erez Ben-Yosef of Tel Aviv University. 3/30/21
    Results of recent excavations in the ancient copper mines of Timna Valley (southern Israel) shed new light on the mystery of King Solomon’s legendary mines,
  • Tel Hazor Overview: History, Conquest, Israelites, Joshua 11, Judges 4, Canaanites, Sea of Galilee

    05.03.21
    The victory over Hazor by Joshua and the Israelites is probably one of the most overlooked miracles in the Bible.

    DONATE: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=6FD65NH6WZFBU
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  • Sebastia (Samaria) - A visit to the capital of the Kingdom of Israel (Omri, Ahab, Jezebel, Elijah)

    26.02.21
  • 64 Archaeological investigations of Kingdom in the Beth Shean Valley with Prof. Amihai Mazar

    07.02.21
    64. Live Zoom Presentation: Archaeological investigations related to the Israelite Kingdom period in the Beth Shean Valley, Israel with Prof. Amihai Mazar
    Professor Mazar will lecture on the results of over 20 years of archeological efforts on 2 major sites: Tel Beth Shean and Tel Rehov.
  • Excavating Slaves' Hill (Site 34) in Timna Valley, Israel

    17.01.21
    See more on our project here: https://www.tau.ac.il/~ebenyose/CTV/
  • The Gezer Calendar, One of the Earliest Surviving Examples of Written Hebrew -Let's read it together

    11.01.21
    An important and personal request from me (followed by information about the site): unfortunately as a tour guide I have not worked since February 2020. Please subscribe to my site and let me show you the Holy Land through it
    On my YouTube site, you can watch more than 18,000 videos about Israel and
  • Following the Stations of the Ark #1: Izbet Zartah (Even Ha'ezer?)

    11.12.21
    #ark #bible #evenhaezer #archaeology #biblicalarchaeology

    This video is part of a new vlogging series from the Holy Land, focusing on biblical archeology, history, tour sites, cultural events and more.
    .
    See the full playlist here - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLAXliHOs-vnf5zv0HT26pB7kcL
  • 360º Tel Ashkelon

    11.11.21
    Join us on the
    https://www.thegoldenreport.com/support-us or on the
    https://www.patreon.com/thegoldenreport

    In this 360-degree video, you can see the ancient 4,000-year-old city and the gated entrance of Ashkelon that was mentioned in the Bible. In these 360º videos, you can experience these anc
  • Tel Gezer, Biblical Site in Israel, Canaanite Archaeology, King Solomon, Paleo-Hebrew Calendar

    26.09.21
    For photos of Tel Gezer please contact me.
    For printable wall art https://www.etsy.com/shop/InstantPhotoDecor

    Situated in the Judean foothills of Israel, Tel Gezer was an important city during the Canaanite and Israelite periods. The site was located on the crossroads of the Via Maris and the road
  • Archaeological excavations expose missing section of the First Temple period Jerusalem wall

    10.09.21
    Information about the First Temple period Jerusalem wall itself will be provided after this announcement.

    Unfortunately, I have not been able to work as a tour guide as from Feb 2020
    Should you wish to support me and my videos please subscribe to my channel and let me guide you through the Holy Lan
  • Siloam Inscription Manuscript Spotlight

    05.09.21
    Join us today for a look at ancient history as we examine the Siloam Inscription, an 8th century BC paleo-Hebrew inscription commemorating the completion of the Siloam tunnel. This enormously significant artifact is one of the oldest surviving Hebrew texts, and we get to read it!

    Replica Stone:
    ht
  • Khirbet al-Ra‘i - Aerial Views (BibleWalks.com)

    28.08.21
    Khirbet al-Ra'i is a multi-period archaeological site in the Judean foothills region. It is located on a strategic location overlooking the Lachish stream, 1Km south east of Kiryat-Gath intersection of highway #6. The site is excavated since 2015, headed by Y. Garfinkel and S. Ganor. Its peak settle
  • A Day at the Dig - Tel Gezer Archaeology Site

    24.08.21
    Joshua Hanlon takes you through a day at an archaeology dig at Tel Gezer, Israel. This is part 1 of a presentation on Biblical archaeology at Nappanee Missionary Church in Nappanee, Indiana. Watch part 2 here: https://youtu.be/wntG3FoN1H8

    Check out this fantastic video series for more info on Bibli
  • Gibeon Overview & Tour, Joshua, Sun Stands Still, Samuel's Tomb, Gibeonites, Nabi Samuel, Jerusalem

    02.07.21
    Gibeon is mentioned 43 times in the Bible and played a major role in the history of Israel. See an in-depth look at the history, the key places of interest, and all that happened in the Bible at this biblical site.
    DONATE: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=6FD65NH6WZFBU
    TOUR TRIPS TO I
  • Episode Twenty-two: Kiriath-Jearim and the Ark Narrative

    01.07.21
    Conversations in the Archaeology and History of Ancient Israel with Israel Finkelstein
    Episode Twenty-two: Kiriath-Jearim and the Ark Narrative

    Israel Finkelstein is a leading figure in the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel. Over 40 years of work and research, he has helped to change the wa
  • Archaeologist Prof. Ben-Tor Talks about how Excavations at Hazor Validate Bible Stories About it

    23.06.21
    The ancient city of Hazor is mentioned in the Bible as the "Head" of the Canaanite kingdoms when the Israelites began to conquer the Promised Land (Joshua 11:10). The Bible tells us that under the courageous leader of Joshua, the city was destroyed and burned with fire. But what do the archaeologica
  • ARCHAELOGIST RAMAT RACHEL

    18.05.21
    Our Shavuot special on location at Kibbutz Ramat Rachel outside of Jerusalem and Bethlehem. Interview with Archaelogist, Professor Yuval Gadot, who was part of the team who excavated this site decades ago, which found archaelogical evidence that it was most likely used as a 'suburban' royal palace o
  • Pharaoh Shishak: Digging for Truth Episode 129

    16.05.21
    Bryan Windle will be on the program to talk about Pharaoh Shishak of Egypt. In I Kings 14, the biblical text claims that Shishak attacked the city of Jerusalem, and plundered the Temple. Do we have archaeological evidence about this Pharaoh and can we trust what the Bible says about this king? Could
  • The Tel Dan Inscription

    27.04.21
    In this video Prof. Cargill examines the Tel Dan, or "House of David" Inscription and reveals what it says, what it doesn't say, gives its proper historical context, and explains why it's important to biblical archaeology.

    More about Dr. Robert R. Cargill, Associate Professor of Classics and Religi
  • The Deir ‘Alla Inscription: Balaam the Son of Beor - Historical False Prophet or Fictional Figure?

    09.04.21
    Do these plaster fragments found at the site of Deir ‘Alla, Jordan help to prove, or disprove, the existence and deeds of the famous false prophet Balaam that are found recorded in the Book of Numbers 22-24 and elsewhere in the Bible? Watch now and find out!

    If you enjoy the video please leave a li
  • ISRAEL - Tel Arad - תל ערד

    07.04.21
    Tel Arad National Park
    Tel Arad is located not far from the modern town of Arad in the northern Negev, here are the ruins of an ancient Canaanite city and on a nearby hill are the ruins of an ancient Israelite fortress built some time after the reign of king Solomon. Amongst the fortress ruins is an
  • Who Really Wrote The Bible? | Naked Archaeologist | Parable

    02.04.21
    Tradition upholds that God dictated the first five books of the Bible to Moses. The Bible says millions of people witnessed this event, but what can archaeology prove about this fact? Could it really be Moses himself who wrote down the words of God, or could there be new research challenging this hi
  • The Assyrian War Machine: King Hezekiah vs. Emperor Sennacherib: Episode 7

    24.03.21
    Join the conversation on faith: https://bit.ly/3qwphmx

    The Hebrew Bible contains a dramatic story of Hezekiah, King of Judah, fighting against the Assyrian Emperor Sennacherib. These events are attested both in Assyrian and Judahite sources and are well represented in the archaeological record. With
  • Episode Nine: A United Monarchy?

    25.02.21
    Conversations in the Archaeology and History of Ancient Israel with Israel Finkelstein
    Episode Nine: A United Monarchy?

    Israel Finkelstein is a leading figure in the archaeology and history of Ancient Israel. Over 40 years of work and research, he has helped to change the way archaeology is conduct
  • Oded Lipschits - Archaeological Exposure of Three Sites that the Bible Ignored

    04.02.21
    Monsieur Oded Lipschits, de l'Université de Tel-Aviv, nous a fait l'honneur de cette conférence intitulée « "The Sound of Silence" - Archaeological Exposure of Three Sites that the Bible Ignored (Ramat Rahel, Moza and Azekah) », le lundi 1er février 2021, sur Zoom.

    Voici le résumé de la conférence
  • Tell el-Kheleifeh, Jordan: An Iron Age II Caravanserai [ASOR 2020]

    04.02.21
    We are pleased to share this presentation in celebration of the virtual conference convened by our colleagues at the American Schools of Oriental Research (@ASOResearch). For additional presentations from the ASOR Virtual Meeting 2020, please see the playlists on our and ASOR's channels (ASORTV).

  • The Origins of the Israelites

    14.11.20
    In the first episode of our series on Ancient Israel and also Judah we are joined by Dr. Aren Maeir who guides us into the controversial and heavily debated origin or origins of the Ancient Israelites.

    He discusses the scholarship on the subject such as:

    Did the Israelites develop out of the Canaa
  • Who Built Tel Rekhesh?

    01.10.20
    By Shuichi Hasegawa, Hisao Kuwabara, Yitzhak Paz
  • The Philistines in History (who they were and where they came from)

    22.08.20
    In this quick episode, we take a look at the history of the people known as Philistines, who they were and where they came from. Long cast off as a backward and barbaric people, modern scholarship has revealed that the Philistines were actually a sophisticated civilization with a complex history.
  • Facing the Facts about the “Face of God”

    21.08.20
    In 2020, an article by Yosef Garfinkel suggested interpreting clay male figures of the 10th and 9th century BCE in Khirbet Qeiyafa as images of the central deity YHWH. The following article is a critical response to Yosef Garfinkel by Shua Kisilevitz, Ido Koch, Oded Lipschits, and David S. Vanderhooft, who reject his hypothesis altogether, citing other examples from the sites of Moza, Tel Kinrot, Tel Rehov, Ashdod and Tirzah.
  • Archaeologists propose new identification for biblical Tel Rosh

    20.08.20
    First documented in the mid-19th century, Tel Rosh presents remains dating back to periods spanning over the millennia.
  • Ancient Bee Hives Discovered from the Town of Prophet Elisha

    19.07.20
    An amazing discovery indicates beekeeping may have been a big industry thousands of years ago. Evidence shows honey was being produced by bees here nearly 3,000 years ago around the time of the prophet Elisha.
  • Tell el-Farah (South) in Israel

    16.07.20
    Updated July 16th 2020
  • What do animal remains tell us about biblical Abel Beth Maacah?

    16.07.20
    Researchers analyzed faunal remains from Abel Beth Maacah to understand more about the relationship between the two centers and their political and economic structure in the centuries that preceded their appearance in the Bible.
  • Unveiling the Secret of the Archaeological Site of Tel Abel Beth Maacah

    01.07.20
    Learn about Unveiling the Secret of the Archaeological Site of Tel Abel Beth Maacah, featuring Dr. Naama Yahalom-Mack. Dr. Yahalom-Mack is Head of the Laboratory for Archaeological Materials and Ancient Technologies at the Institute of Archaeology at the Hebrew University. Specializing in archaeo-metallurgy (the study of ancient metals), she uses cutting-edge technologies to determine the origin of archaeological metals and other materials, to help understand ancient civilizations.
  • Prof. Aren Maeir – Excavations at Tell es-Safi, Biblical Gath of the Philistines, home of Goliath

    20.05.20
    Our new series of Zoom lectures, "Virtual Tour and Learn"!

    Prof. Aren Maeir's lecture on the Excavations at Tell es-Safi, Biblical Gath of the Philistines, home of Goliath.

    The Martin (Szusz) Department of Land of Israel Studies and Archaeology at
    Bar-Ilan University presents a series of public Zo
  • Tel Moza - Preliminary Report

    26.03.20
    Volume 132 Year 2020 - article by Shua Kisilevitz and Oded Lipschits
  • The temple discovered in Tel Moza was as large as Solomon's temple and survived even after the first destruction of the temple in Jerusalem

    23.02.20
  • Was the Bible right? Inscription may confirm ancient Israel’s borders

    08.02.20
    A newly-discovered Hebrew-language inscription might confirm that the border of ancient Israel reached areas that some archaeologists were previously skeptical about, thus confirming the Bible’s account.
  • ‘Royal Estate’ That Served Biblical Kings Found in Northern Israel

    29.01.20
    The remains at Horvat Tevet shed light on the rise and fall of the powerful Omride dynasty, which ruled over the northern kingdom of Israel 2,900 years ago

  • Hebrew nametag on ancient wine jar reopens debate on size of Israelite kingdom

    10.01.20
    Researchers were astonished when a closer review of the clay vessels from Abel Beth Maacah revealed that one of them bore an inscription in ancient Hebrew.
  • One of the most special and least known Crusader fortresses in Israel - The story of Apollonia–Arsuf

    14.12.20
    An important and personal request from me (followed by information about the site): unfortunately as a tour guide I have not worked since February 2020. Please subscribe to my site and let me show you the Holy Land through it
    On my YouTube site, you can watch more than 18,000 videos about Israel and
  • Teaching 9 - Tel Arad (The Forgotten Temple)

    23.11.20
    Touring through 2 parts of the ancient ruins of Arad, in the south mid-eastern area of Israel.
    The more ancient pagan city of Arad that was destroyed 4500 years ago and the less ancient part of it, a citadel that was built in the time of the Kings of Israel.
  • Bible & Archaeology Discussions Israel Finkelstein & Thomas Römer: Episode 4 - Armageddon & Megiddo

    16.11.20
    Thomas Römer and Israel Finkelstein discuss the reference in the Book of Kings to the killing of King Josiah of Judah at Megiddo by Pharaoh Necho in 609 BCE and the connection between this event and the Armageddon tradition in the Book of Revelation.
  • 7 - Campaña 2019. Reconstrucción en 3D de la Casa A. Hierro IIA.

    28.10.20
  • Tel Yarmuth - Aerial views (BibleWalks.com)

    29.08.20
    Tel Yarmuth (Jarmuth) is located in the low hills (Shephelah) of Judea, above the newly built neighborhood of Ramat Beit Shemesh. The mound, 180 dunams in area, has an acropolis on its eastern side and a lower city on the western side.
    On the lower city is a monumental palace, covering and area of
  • Tel Beer Sheva National Park

    20.08.20
    Walking tour. No action. Tel Be'er Sheva is a beautiful park in the desert of Israel.
    Tel Be’er Sheva, the area in which the forefathers of the Jewish nation (Abraham, Isaac and Jacob) lived and worked, is an important biblical tel – one of three from the days of the Bible that UNESCO has included
  • Bible and Archaeology Discussions Finkelstein & Römer: Episode 3 - King Solomon & Megiddo

    12.08.20
    Israel Finkelstein and Thomas Römer discuss the association of King Solomon with the celebrated site of Megiddo in view of the archaeological exploration of the site: the two palaces, the stables and the six-chambered gate. Is there a Solomonic stratum at Megiddo? What is the background to the bibli
  • Magnetic Field

    03.08.20
    The long memory of the jewish people at the service of science


    Interested in what's happening on campus?
    Follow us here on Youtube: https://bit.ly/tauvod-sub

    On our website: https://bit.ly/tauofficialsite
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    On Lin
  • The Assyrian siege ramp in Lachish (Israel). From here in 701 BC they invaded the city.

    09.06.20
    Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera [email protected] +972-54-6905522 tel סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
    My name is Zahi Shaked
    In 2000 I became a registered liscenced tourist guide.
    My dedication in life is to pass on the ancient history of the Holy Land.

  • The History of Megiddo ~ With Dr Eric Cline ~ Historian /Archaeologist (Author of 1177 BC)

    06.06.20
    In this episode we dive into the history of Megiddo which is a site that has seen the rise and fall of at least twenty cities. From the Neolithic to its final decline and depopulation we explore the history, archaeological discoveries and conflicts that have taken place there.

    We watch as Dr. Cline
  • Ancient Biblical Samaria & the Palace of Ahab and Jezebel (FCF S10E12)

    17.05.20
    Jeff and Isaac visit ancient Biblical Samaria which was the capital city of the Kingdom of Israel for 157 years. King Omri built this city and later King Ahab and Jezebel ruled from here and led the Israelites into idol worship. Jeff also visits with Jim Shutz in Beit Shemesh, Executive Director of
  • Excavation at Akko - A Day on the Tel

    25.03.20
    Archaeology means getting up early, working hard in the hot sun, and documenting every inch of excavated ground. It's also a lot of fun. One of the only ways we have of reaching out and touching the ancient world is digging with our bare hands, and the opportunity to do that is why students and facu
  • Archaeologists discover Phoenician family tomb in ancient city of Achziv

    25.12.19
    Archaeologists have discovered the remains of an entire Phoenician family buried together in a tomb in Achziv, an ancient population center on the Mediterranean coast near the northern city Nahariya.
  • Whole Nuclear Family Found in Ancient Phoenician Tomb in Israel

    24.12.19
    The remains of what seems to be a cherished child buried with its unadorned parents in Achziv 2,800 years ago indicate they lived well and died a century before the Assyrians arrived
  • Archaeological site could cast light on life of Biblical villain Sisera

    27.11.19
    The Bronze Age site of el Ahwat may have been the fortress of the Canaanite commander Sisera, whose death at the hands of Jael is recorded in the Book of Judges.
  • 'New York' of the Bronze Age discovered in Israel

    06.10.19
    A 5,000-year-old city found north of Tel Aviv points to sophisticated urban planning taking place earlier than previously thought. Israel's Antiquities Authority has called it the "New York of the early Bronze Age."

  • Assyrians Came, Conquered, and Kicked Everyone Out: Tablets Reveal 2,700-year-old Relocation

    27.09.19
    Cuneiform records show land sales 2,700 years ago in Hadid, central Israel, were made to people with entirely foreign names
  • A virtual tour of Esur

    19.09.19
    Credit: Yaakov Shmidov, Israel Antiquities Authority
  • A visit to the Bull Site

    19.06.19
  • A new exhibition - Highway through History

    13.03.19
    A new exhibition at the Bible Lands Museum Jerusalem presents artifacts discovered during a rescue excavation of Tel Beit Shemesh. The Route 38 expansion plan has inadvertently led to important new historical evidence. Significant finds uncovered will be on display for the first time, a
  • The Lachish Reliefs

    13.08.19
    Archaeological finds of Sennacherib's palace at Nineveh come to life to depict the Battle of Lachish from the Book of Isaiah.
  • Hazor's Destruction in Joshua/Judges (Part Two): Digging for Truth Episode 61

    21.07.19
    In Part Two, Scott Lanser and Henry Smith discuss evidence for Hazor's destruction in both the 15th century and 13th century BC. Topics include Deborah and Barak, cultic desecration, and evidence for fire (part two of two).
  • Hazor's Destruction in Joshua/Judges (Part One): Digging for Truth Episode 60

    14.07.19
    The Canaanite city of Hazor was destroyed by the Israelites in the late 15th century BC. Join DFT co-hosts Scott Lanser and Henry Smith as they discuss the importance of Hazor, King Jabin, the Amarna Letters, the Mari archive and Egyptian execration texts mentioning Hazor. (Part one of two).
  • 'Being Able to Dig the Bible:' The Secrets of Tel Shiloh Revealed

    25.06.19
    Shilo, Judea and Samaria. Jun 23, 2019. Video by Esty Dziubov/TPS.
  • Wandering around the Bull Site

    07.06.19
  • Walking down into the pool at Gibeon (Al Jib)

    06.06.19
    The pool of Gibeon mentioned in 2 Samuel 2:12-17.
  • Uncover History at Tel Shimron

    26.02.19
    In the museum, guests are invited to see read about pieces of history, but now, Dr. Daniel Master is inviting you to discover and touch history at Tel Shimron.

    Learn more at www.telshimronexcavations.com
  • Solomon's Temple Explained

    20180719
    Solomon's temple stood in Jerusalem for almost 400 years. It was the crown jewel of Jerusalem, and the center of worship to the Lord. Understanding the significance of its location, history, and design can greatly add to one's reverence for one of the most holy places in the world.
  • A 3,000-year-old glass head deepens one of the Bible’s oldest mysteries

    09.06.18
    The Israeli and American-led team of archaeologists were about five years into their excavations last summer, “digging through the floor of a massive Iron Age structure” when they found the head beneath the top of the site
  • Khirbet Qeiyafa-3D

    20180402
     A 3D reconstruction of Khirbet Qeiyafa
  • Pro​j​ecto Arqueológico ​na Palestina: Tell el-Far'a

    07.02.18
    Projecto Arqueológico na Palestina: Tell el-Far'a dirigido por Universidade NOVA de Lisboa (NOVA FCSH), Universidade da Coruña e Ministério do Turismo e Antiguidades da Palestina.

  • The Tel Burna Archeological Excavation Project

    06.12.18
    An exciting look at a day in the life of a volunteer Ariel University's Institute of Archaeology Tel Burna Archaeological excavation project in Israel. Will you join us next year?

    https://telburna.wordpress.com
  • Education in Ancient Israel: Insights from Kuntillet 'Ajrud

    16.11.18
    How were traditions passed on in biblical times? What kind of "education" took place in ancient Israel? The recent full publication of the inscriptions from the excavations at Kuntillet 'Ajrud provide the first complete, though fragmentary, set of elementary of scribal exercises from Ancient Israel.
  • Exploring Tel Arad: An Ancient Canaanite and Israelite City

    12.07.18
    I visited dozens of archaeological sites while researching in Jerusalem. Tel Arad was one of the my favorites and the inspiration for my video on YHWH and Asherah. Here is a longer exploration of this ancient Canaanite and Israelite city.

    Twitter: @andrewmarkhenry
    Facebook: www.facebook.com/religi
  • The Shiloh Excavations: What A Dig Does

    08.06.18
    Find out what happens on our archaeological excavations at Biblical Shiloh. Join us for our next season: www.DigShiloh.org
  • Atlit castle

    17.01.17
    Sketch of visualization of Atlit fortress based on book of C. N. Johns. Work in progress.
  • Tel Goded - Aerial Views (BibleWalks.com)

    26.12.17
    A large mound 3KM north east of Beit Guvrin, with ruins of a Canaanite city (Middle and Late Bronze age) and Judean Kingdom city (destroyed by Sennacherib in 701 BC). The city is identified by some scholars as Moreshet-Gath, birthplace of prophet Micah (Micah 1,1): "The word of the LORD that came t
  • The Lachish Reliefs in the Southwest Palace, Nineveh

    28.11.17
    Flyover of the Assyrian King Sennacherib's "Palace without Rival" (the Southwest Palace) at Nineveh (modern Mosul, Iraq) and then a flythrough of the room in the palace holding reliefs depicting the Assyrian destruction of Lachish, mirroring descriptions of the events in the Bible. Video developed b
  • The Brutal Assyrian Siege of Lachish: Judean City Destroyed

    04.11.17
    LIVE on TBN, Fridays at 10:30pm ET (9:30pm CT, 8:30pm MT, 7:30pm PT)
  • Bible archeology Proto-Hebrew alphabet evidence of early Hebrew writing

    14.10.17
    Archeological discovery of an ancient stone with the inscription of a proto-Hebrew alphabet, found at Tel Zayit and dating to around the 10th century BC. This is early evidence of Israelite writing and that the process of writing the Bible started way before the Babylonian Captivity.
  • King Hezekiah & Siloam Inscription in Hebrew with Ami Mazar and Shani Atias

    23.04.17
    Directed by Peter Hagyo-Kovacs from the documentary film, Inside Jerusalem, available on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/movie/inside-jerusalem-identity-and-the-ancient-past/id444531702

    Text of Siloam Inscription in English (read by Shani Atias in Hebrew):

    "... the tunnel ... and this is the s
  • Penn State and the Tel Akko Total Archaeology Project, Israel

    06.03.17
  • Israeli Archeologist to Start Dig at 'Ark of the Covenant' Site

    09.02.17
    Diggers will begin their first ever excavation at Kiryat Yearim.
  • Previously Unknown Canaanite Revolt Against Egypt Revealed in Ancient Jaffa

    22.10.16
    There is no record of the Canaanites ousting their Egyptian overlords, but 3,100-year-old remains of fiery destruction suggest they did just that.

  • Tell el-Far’a, archaeological investigations in the biblical lands

    02.09.16
    Recent work has brought news on Assyrian domination in the region and about Iron Age in the eastern Levant
  • Unearthing a Philistine cemetery in ancient Ashkelon

    20160611
    Researchers from the Harvard-backed Leon Levy Expedition discuss a “moment of history that has never been seen before” as they uncover 160 individual remains that will provide insights into the lives and ancestry of the Philistines.
  • Tel Batash - Biblical Timnah (BibleWalks.com)

    21.08.16
    A 40 dunam (10 acres) walled city, on the south bank of the Sorek valley. First fortified in the MB period, continuously occupied until the Hellenistic period. Tel Batash is identified as Biblical city of Timnah. During the times of Samson, it was a Philistine city, where Samson searched for a wife
  • Tel Rosh Aerial views (Biblewalks.com)

    14.02.16
    Tel Rosh (Khirbet er Ruweis) is a large (25 dunam) ancient mound, with remains spanning the Early Bronze Age to Early Arab period. The Biblical city is identified as Bethshemesh of the Galilee, allotted to the Naphtali tribe. It is located in the Upper Galilee region, near Moshav Elkosh- a farming s
  • 3D modeling - Tel-Asur archaeological site

    24.11.15
    A 3D modeling of the excavation site we did.
    The scan delivered a 2Cm resolution 3D model with high accuracy level.
    We delivered high resolution Tiff orthophoto, DSM and DTM. also delivered was a 3D model in a number of formats.
    The scan was done using our Terrascan-B drone with only two flights.

    על תל אסור - תֵּל אֵסוּר (בערבית: תַל אַסַווִיר, "
  • Rosh Zayit Aerial View (BibleWalks.com)

    07.07.15
    Ruins of an Iron age site, in the hills above the plain of Cabul. An 11th-8th C BC Phoenician fortress, regional administrative center, military post and agriculture village. The site may be identified with the Biblical Cabul from the times of King Solomon.
    https://www.biblewalks.com/Sites/RoshZayi
  • Archaeologist Ehud Galili on Tel Dor and the Fish Ponds in Nakhsholim

    02.07.15
  • Excavating Over Two Thousand Years of History at Tel ‘Eton

    01.07.15
    By: Avraham Faust and Hayah Katz
  • Tel 'Eton Aerial View (Biblewalks.com)

    20.10.15
    Remains of a large Biblical city located in the Judean low hills region east of Hebron, identified as city of Eglon.
    Read: https://www.biblewalks.com/Sites/Eton.html

    Bible (Joshua 10 5): "Therefore the five kings of the Amorites... king of Eglon, gathered themselves ... and made war against it"
  • Tel Erani Aerial View (BibleWalks.com)

    28.07.15
    Ruins of a multi-period Biblical city located near Kiryat Gat, at the edge of the southern Shephela. The site consists of a lower city covering a large area of 250 dunams (25 hectares), and an upper city of 20 dunams (2 hectares) on an elevated mound at the north east corner. The city was fortified
  • 15th Century BC Destruction Layer at Joshua's Ai

    18.06.15
    Dr. Scott Stripling describes a destruction layer at Joshua's Ai (Khirbet el-Maqatir), which features calcined bedrock and Late Bronze I pottery in situ from the time of Joshua. (Video courtesy of Steve Rudd). www.Maqatir.com
  • Flight Over Tel Beth Shemesh (BibleWalks.com)

    14.06.15
    Tel Beth Shemesh - An important Biblical city, located in the valley of Nahal Sorek. Beth Shemesh is mentioned in connection with the return of the Ark of the Covenant by the Philistines.
    https://www.biblewalks.com/Sites/BeitShemesh.html
  • Flight Over Socho (BibleWalks.com)

    13.06.15
    Sochoh - Remains of a Biblical city in the valley of Elah, dated to the times of David and successor kings of Judah. It was an important fortified gateway city, protecting the western flank of the Kingdom.
    http://biblewalks.com/Sites/Sochoh.html
  • Hebrew Inscriptions Pairing Yahweh with the Goddess Asherah

    21.04.15
    Challenging claims of Yahwehistic monotheism, Hebrew dedicatory blessing inscriptions discovered at Kuntillet Ajrud and Khirbet el-Qom, explicitly pair the goddess Asherah with the proclaimed bachelor-god Yahweh.
    More Asherah information and resources at https://vanquishedgoddessasherah.com/
    Thoughts
  • Shishak's Military Campaign in Asia

    25.03.15
    This is a Google Earth tour of sites in Israel/Palestine and Jordan that were affected by Pharaoh Shishak's military campaign.
  • Tell Balata "an ancient Canaanite city Shechem"

    18.01.15
  • New Archaeological Data for the Study of Ancient Israelite Religion and Society from Tel Dan

    12.05.14
  • Publishing the Tell Jemmeh Excavations, 40 years later

    07.05.14
  • A 3,300 Year Old Coffin was Exposed Containing the Personal Belongings of a Wealthy Canaanite – Possibly an Official of the Egyptian Army (April 2014)

    02.04.14
    he rare artifacts were uncovered during excavations by the Israel Antiquities Authority near Tel Shadud
  • The ancient agricultural implements path in the Yatir Forest - Israel

    22.11.14
    Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
    [email protected] +972-54-6905522 tel
    סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
    My name is Zahi Shaked
    In 2000 I became a registered liscenced tourist guide.
    My dedication in life is to pass on the ancient history of the Holy Land.

    F
  • tel akko

    14.07.14
    Excavation at Tel Akko, Israel.
  • Tel Dor

    03.06.14
    Dor city was founded 3,500 years ago on top of a hill alongside the Mediterranean Sea and was one of the most important cities in Israel. Dor was the largest fortified port city between Acre in the north and Jaffa in the south and its port flourished from trading in the eastern basin of the Mediterr
  • The Lachish Reliefs

    02.12.13
    When King Hezekiah rebelled against Assyria in 701 BCE, Sennacherib launched a campaign against Judah and conquered all of its fortified cities. Sennacherib immortalized the conquest of the city of Lachish in huge reliefs that he installed in his palace in the Iraqi city of Nineveh. This animated vi
  • Hezekiah's Tunnel

    02.12.13
    The Shiloah (Siloam) Tunnel
    The rebellion of the king of Judah against the Assyrian Empire in 701 BCE placed Jerusalem in great danger. This video depicts Jerusalem's ordeal under the threat of Assyrian siege and Hezekiah's creative solution to the city's resulting water problem.
  • The Ceremonial Precinct in the Upper City of Hazor: What Does the Identification As a Temple or Palace Have to Do With Joshua’s Conquest?

    02.07.13
    By: Amnon Ben-Tor, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • The Broad Wall of Ancient Jerusalem

    02.12.13
    The refugees that came to Jerusalem from the collapsing kingdom of Israel in 721 BCE built their homes in an unsettled area on the city's western hill, and King Hezekiah had to protect this area from Sennacherib's army ahead of the Assyrian siege. This video shows the massive wall that Hezekiah buil
  • Givati Parking Lot dig Jerusalem is an archaeological excavation in the City of David neighborhood

    10.09.13
    Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera
    [email protected] 972-54-6905522 tel
    סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
    My name is Zahi Shaked
    In 2000 I became a registered liscenced tourist guide.
    My dedication in life is to pass on the ancient history of the Holy Land.

    Fo
  • Ekron

    12.04.13
  • The Cyrus Cylinder: An Artifact Ahead of Its Time

    09.03.13
    More on the Cyrus Cylinder: https://j.mp/16gs7Op

    This relic from ancient Persia had a profound influence on the Founding Fathers
  • Excavations Highlight Late Bronze Age Jaffa

    10.09.12
  • Tour of Archaeological Excavations in Ancient Tel Hebron

    23.12.12
    David Wilder explains the archaeological excavations in Tel Hebron including stairs that date back 4,500 years, and artifacts that indicate positive prove that Jews lived in Hebron since the days of Abraham.

    To visit Hebron including the Cave of Machpela and the archaeological site of Tel Hebron, c
  • Smithsonian Institution Excavations at Tel Jemmeh, Israel, 1970 - 1973

    07.11.12
    6:16 minute film clips from film footage documenting archaeological fieldwork at a Smithsonian Institution excavation at Tel Jemmeh, Israel under the leadership of Smithsonian curator Gus Van Beek. Film footage is in the collections of the Smithsonian Institution.

    For more information, search SOVA
  • Faculty Profile: Robert Mullins, Ph.D. and Abel Beth Maacah

    30.10.12
    In summer 2012, Azusa Pacific University, in a joint project with Hebrew University of Jerusalem, began a 10-year survey and excavation project on Abel Beth Maacah (1 Kings 15: 20 and 2 Kings 15: 29), one of ancient Israel's northern guardian cities. Azusa Pacific Associate Professor of Biblical Stu
  • Ashkelon: Seaport of the Philistines

    22.09.12
    Sunday at the Met Helen Diller Lecture Series with Professor Lawrence Stager who speaks about 25 seasons of excavations in the city of Ashkelon, Israel
  • Flying Through History - Pharaoh Shishak I's Military Campaign in the Holy Land

    10.09.12
    Flying Through History - Pharaoh Shishak I's Military Campaign in the Holy Land
    An Application of the Digital Archaeology of the Holy Land (DAAHL)
    Center of Interdisciplinary Studies for Art, Architecture, and Archaeology
    California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology
    Univers
  • Ap-chaeology 2, Part 2: Thomas Levy and Iron IIb-c Khirbet en-Nahas

    29.07.12
    This is part of a video series on archaeologists who have (likely wrongly) proposed that the sites they are excavating have something to do with the United Monarchy of Israel and Judah. For sources, see https://againstjebelallawz.wordpress.com/2012/07/29/sources-3/
  • Ap-chaeology 2, Part 1: Thomas Levy and Iron I-IIa Khirbet en-Nahas

    12.07.12
    This is part of a video series on archaeologists who have (likely wrongly) proposed that the sites they are excavating have something to do with the United Monarchy of Israel and Judah. For sources, see https://againstjebelallawz.wordpress.com/2012/07/12/sources-2/
  • The Stolen Canaanite Gods of Hebrews/Israelites: El, Baal, Asherah

    19.06.12
    The Bibles Stolen Gods from the Canaanite Pantheon (El, Baal, Asherah, Anat, Yahw, Ashtoreth, etc.) featuring Professor Christine Hayes of Yale University -- mrw nTr tkAt's website: https://www.livestream.com/africanoriginsofwesterreligions [The African Origins of Western Religions]
  • The Givati Parking Lot Excavation- City of David

    29.11.10
    Across from the entrance to the City of David, in the Givati Parking Lot, archaeologist Dr. Doron Ben-Ami discovered what appears to be the palace of Queen Helena of Adiabene. According to ancient Jewish and Roman texts, Queen Helena converted to Judaism in the First Century CE and then relocated he
  • Excavations at Kadesh Barnea (Tell El-Qudeirat) 1976–1982

    12.05.09
  • Tel Zeton

    27.03.08
    Golan, D., 2008, Tel Zeton, Hadashot Arkheologiyot – Excavations and Surveys in Israel, 120
  • Jarvis Lecture on Christianity & Culture Part 2

    31.07.08
    Dr. William G. Dever presents a lecture titled "Did God Have a Wife? Archaeology and Folk Religion in Ancient Israel," for the 16th Annual Jarvis Lecture on Christianity & Culture, presented by the Thomas Harriot College of Arts & Sciences Religious Studies Program.
  • TELL ABU HAWAM

    01.10.01
    TELL ABU HAWAM Excavations
  • Ramat Rachel Citadel & garden - 3D

    3D reconstruction of Ramat Rachel Citadel & garden
  • Pictures of special finds from Tel Nami in the Israel Museum website

    Pictures of special finds from Tel Nami in the Israel Museum website: scepters decorated with pomegranates, a wine set, and incense stands.
  • Near Jerusalem: A temple from the days of the temple in Jerusalem, resembling Solomon's temple, was discovered

  • Shua Kisilevitz | "Unto the place which the LORD your God shall choose?" On the temple from the first temple period in Tel Moza

    A filmed lecture in Hebrew.
  • A lecture by Shua Kisilevitz – “The Tale of Tel Moza”, in the faculty of Protestant theology at Charles University in Prague, April 2019.

  • The Izbet Sartah Abecedary, One of the Best Examples of the Proto-Canaanite Alphabet

  • Deir Alla Inscription

  • Burial Inscription from Khirbet el-Qom

  • The Broad Wall, Jerusalem

  • Ein El-Qudeirat

  • Tell el-Far'ah, South Israel Excavation Project

    Within these pages you will find information about the ongoing excavation at
    Tell el-Far'ah, South, including project objectives and volunteer information,
    as well as links other valuable information for individuals interested in the history and
    archaeology of the Ancient Near East.
  • Episode 12: The Untold Story of The Ella Valley Tribe

    In this episode I shall contend that the “Ella Valley tribe” lived on its land for 1,100 years, beginning in the Middle Bronze Age I, around 1,800 BC, until the Assyrian king Sennacherib’s campaign in 701 BC. During this long period, the tribe was active in the geo-political area of the Shephelah, between the cities of Gat, Ekron, Beit-Shemesh and Lachish, and was not related to the geo-political system of the mountain area. The city built in Tel Azekah was the tribe’s centre, and during long periods in the second millennium BC, it was a strong, rich, and fortified Urban centre. The Judean kings gradually established their rule over the Ella Valley tribe and the area’s urban centre, beginning after Gat’s destruction by the king of Aram-Damascus Hazael in the last third of the 9th century BC, probably completing their takeover not before the middle of the 8th century BC. Sennacherib’s campaign brought the end of the Ella Valley tribe and the city of Azekah. A large part of the population that survived was deported to Assyria, and others probably escaped, some finding refuge around Jerusalem. Only after the Assyrian withdrawal from the area in the 630s BC, during King Josiah’s reign, could Judah take over the Shephelah and the Ella Valley again. The place became an important centre of the kingdom’s olive oil industry, and Azekah was rebuilt as an administrative centre and military fort on Judah’s border, when for the first time in its history a population originally from Judah lived in it, among them, perhaps, the grandchildren of those who escaped from Azekah to Jerusalem during Sennacherib’s campaign.
  • Tel Hadar: A Bronze and Iron Age Community in the Central Levant: The Moshe Kochavi and Pirhiya Beck Excavations (1987–1998)

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