Biblical Archaeology Review, July/August 2000
Special Section
Spotlight on Sepphoris
How Jewish Was Sepphoris in Jesus’ Time?
Sepphoris is a bare 4 miles from Jesus’ hometown, Nazareth. So it is not surprising that the ancient city has become central to the study of the historical Jesus, especially because it has been very extensively excavated, while Nazareth has yielded far fewer archaeological...Spotlight on Sepphoris
Bringing Water to Sepphoris
I first learned of Sepphoris’s ancient water system in 1975 from a local resident named Buki. He told me about a huge underground cavern three stories high and stretching more than two football fields long. It sounded to me a little like a flight of fancy. “When...The Pools of Sepphoris: Ritual Baths or Bathtubs?
Introduction
Was Sepphoris a Jewish city in the first century C.E.? Mark Chancey and Eric Meyers put forth their view earlier in this issue (“How Jewish Was Sepphoris in Jesus’ Time?”). One of their key pieces of evidence is the presence in the city of a number of...The Pools of Sepphoris: Ritual Baths or Bathtubs?
They’re Not Ritual Baths
One sure sign that religiously observant Jews inhabited a site from the turn of the era is the presence of ritual immersion pools (mikva’ot; singular, mikveh). More than a dozen stepped pools have been uncovered in excavations at the important Lower Galilee site of Sepphoris, just 4...The Pools of Sepphoris: Ritual Baths or Bathtubs?
Yes, They Are
Hanan Eshel attempts to discredit the identification of mikva’ot at Sepphoris,1 but he also suggests that first-century C.E. Sepphoris, in the time of Jesus, was both a pagan and a Jewish city. This has been the subject of much discussion and debate among the excavators as the...The Pools of Sepphoris: Ritual Baths or Bathtubs?