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Biblical Archaeology Review, March/April 2017

Volume43Number2

Features

Earliest Depictions of the Virgin Mary

By Mary Joan Winn Leith

A third-century portrait of a woman drawing water from a well was uncovered at a church in Dura-Europos, Syria. While this was originally interpreted as the Biblical scene of the Samaritan woman who speaks with Jesus, further analysis suggests that it portrays the Annunciation—making this painting the earliest depiction of the Virgin Mary. But there are other candidates.Read more ›

Old, New Banquet Hall by the Temple Mount

By Joseph PatrichShlomit Weksler-Bdolah

A banqueting complex was recently identified just beside the Temple Mount. Dating to the time of King Herod, it projects the splendor and comfort enjoyed by royal guests. With its two dining halls and a fountain room in between, this composite triclinium is probably the most splendid Herodian building that has survived the 70 C.E. Roman destruction of Jerusalem.Read more ›

How to Find the Hazor Archives (I Think)

By Shlomit Bechar

Biblical Hazor was the largest and most important royal city in the southern Levant in the second millennium B.C.E. Its continuing exploration has brought to light impressive architecture and unique objects. But, one major discovery remains elusive: Where are Hazor’s cuneiform archives?Read more ›

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