Biblical Archaeology Review

Biblical Archaeology Review is the flagship publication of the Biblical Archaeology Society. For more than 40 years it has been making the world of archaeology in the lands of the Bible come alive for the interested layperson. Full of vivid images and articles written by leading scholars, this is a must read for anyone interested in the archaeology of the ancient Near East.

Endnote 12 - How Did the Philistines Get to Canaan? One: by Sea

For this alternative explanatory model as it pertains to the Sea Peoples in general, see Sherratt, “‘Sea Peoples’ and the Economic Structure of the Late Second Millennium in the Eastern Mediterranean,” in Mediterranean Peoples, pp. 292–313; for the application of the model specifically to the Philistine settlement, see Alexander A. Bauer, “Cities of the Sea: Maritime Trade and the Origin of Philistine Settlement in the Early Iron Age Southern Levant,” Oxford Journal of Archaeology 17.2 (1998), pp. 149–167.

Endnote 10 - How Did the Philistines Get to Canaan? One: by Sea

For the discovery of Late Helladic female figurines at Delphi, see L. Lerat, “Trouvailles mycéniennes à Delphes,” Bulletin de Correspondance Hellènique 59 (1935), pp. 329–375 (especially pp. 329–333 and pl. XIX); for “Ashdoda” figurines, see Trude Dothan, The Philistines and Their Material Culture (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1982), pp. 234–237, fig. 9, pl. 19.

Endnote 4 - How Did the Philistines Get to Canaan? One: by Sea

For both types of cooking vessels at Tel Miqne-Ekron, see Ann Killebrew, “Ceramic Typology of Late Bronze II and Iron I Assemblages from Tel Miqne-Ekron: The Transition from Canaanite to Philistine Culture,” in Seymour Gitin, Amihai Mazar and Ephraim Stern, eds., Mediterranean Peoples in Transition, Thirteenth to Early Tenth Centuries B.C.E. (In Honor of Trude Dothan) (Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1998), pp. 379–405 (especially figs. 3.6-9, 7.19, 10.13-14 and 12.15).

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