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.
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Authors
ReViews
Jerusalem I: From the Bronze Age to the Maccabees
Graeme Auld and Margreet Steiner (Macon, GA: Mercer Univ. Press, 1996) 109 pp., $16.95 (paperback)
With Jesus in Jerusalem: His First and Last Days in Judea
First Person: We’re on the Web!
Backward Glance: Painting the Past: The Lithographs of David Roberts
Buried Treasure: The Silver Hoard from Dor
The Only Relic from Herod’s Temple?
Bad Timing
It Is There: Ancient Texts Prove It
With unqualified certainty, Margreet Steiner asserts that in the Late Bronze Age (1550–1150 B.C.E.), the period just before the Israelite settlement, there was “no … town, let alone a city” of Jerusalem. As far as the archaeological record is concerned, there is, for that period, “simply nothing.”
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