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Biblical Archaeology Review, January/February 1999

Volume25Number1

Special Section

Dig In: A Guide to ’99 Digs

Introduction

It may be impossible to travel through time, but working at an archaeological dig comes pretty close. And you don’t need a lot of fancy degrees to do it. Volunteers do most of the dirty work—and are often the lucky ones who find the artifacts. Volunteers come...Read more ›

Dig In: A Guide to ’99 Digs

Guide to Sites

Here’s a brief look at the sites that will be accepting volunteers for the 1999 season, some of the important discoveries made in the past and what the dig directors plan for the upcoming season. Pertinent past BAR articles on the sites are listed at the end...Read more ›

Features

Light at the End of the Tunnel

Warren’s Shaft theory of David’s conquest shattered

By Ronny ReichEli Shukron

We thought we understood the complicated waterworks beneath the area of Jerusalem known as the City of David, the oldest part of the city. But new excavations near the Gihon Spring will require a major reassessment of the Canaanite city, including popular speculation regarding...Read more ›

Has David Been Found in Egypt?

By Hershel Shanks

A leading Egyptologist has recently suggested that the name of the Biblical king David may appear in a tenth-century B.C.E. Egyptian inscription. If correct, this mention of David dates a hundred years earlier than the mention of the “House of David” in the now-famous stele from Tel...Read more ›

Pharaoh’s Workers: How the Israelites Lived in Egypt

By Leonard LeskoBarbara Lesko

Whatever doubts scholars may entertain about the historicity of the Exodus, memories of an Israelite sojourn in Egypt seem too sharply etched to dismiss out of hand. The Biblical account simply contains too many accurate details and bears too many correspondences with Egyptian records...Read more ›

Departments

WorldWide

Carthage, North Africa (A Suburb of Modern Tunis, Tunisia)