Biblical Archaeology Review, September/October 2005
Features
The Siloam Pool
Where Jesus Cured the Blind Man
Few places better illustrate the layered history that archaeology uncovers than the little ridge known as the City of David, the oldest inhabited part of Jerusalem. For example, to tell the story of the Pool of Siloam, where Jesus cured the blind man, we must go back...Discovering Hebron
The City of the Patriarchs Slowly Yields Its Secrets
When modern tourists visit Hebron, they focus almost exclusively on the Tomb of the Patriarchs, a magnificent shrine built 2,000 years ago during the Herodian period over the traditional site of the Cave of Machpelah. The Bible tells us the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and...Life and Death on the Israel-Lebanon Border
Excavation Yields Thousands of Seal Impressions
When you look at a map, the first things you notice are borders. But what did borders mean in ancient times? In the mid-1990s, we became curious about that very question. Both of us had been excavating in Israel for more than 25 years—and during those years...Mycenaeans Were There Before the Israelites
Excavating the Dan Tomb
Avraham Biram and Rachel Ben-Dov (Jerusalem: Hebrew Union College, Nelson Glueck School of Biblical Archaeology, 2002) 248 pp., $48 (available from the publisher, 13 King David St., Jerusalem 94101,...Read more ›
Dan II; A Chronicle of the Excavations and the Late Bronze Age “Mycenaean” Tomb