Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Hatshepsut Mummy Identified
From the New York Times, a stray tooth and DNA analysis has shown that a mummy found decades ago in a humble tomb is that of the famed Egyptian queen.
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Minutiae
Some tidbits for everyone . . .
1.) The latest issue of BAR has entered the mail stream and our subscribers should be receiving it shortly. The cover article is about Galilee in Jesus' time and the cover picture itself is of Pan, the god of the forests, from a first century A.D. altar in Beth Shean. Another article of note concerns the rediscovery of a site that was reburied almost a hundred years ago containing the forgotten tombs of two Israelite kings. We also continue our celebration of the sixtieth anniversary of the Dead Sea Scrolls with interviews of Geza Vermes and Lawrence Schiffman.
2.) For those of you who don't subscribe, the issue should be on the newsstand within two or three weeks. If you'd like to subscribe, here's the link.
3.) For our premier members, the May/June 07 issue is now available in the archive. (If you'd like to be a premier member, with all of the benefits that entails, you can sign up here.)
3.) Our editor has just completed a report from a conference we sponsored in January in Jerusalem concerning recently allegations of the authenticity of certain items in the Israel Museum's collection. A free download of the report can be had here. The page also has an audio selection where you can listen to Gabriel Barkay present his 10 key points for judging the authenticity of items.
4.) Hershel has just completed a new book called The Copper Scroll and the Search for the Temple Treasure. I'll let you know when it's available (it should be up on our site in a couple of days), but the fun part is that Hershel will be autographing the first run of copies we sell.
5.) In related news, Hershel has also completed another book on the Temple Mount that will be published by Continuum in the near future. I'm told by reliable people that everything is ready to go and we're just waiting for one or two details to be cleared up before we go to press. Once the book is available, I'll let everyone know where to find it.
6.) We're still in the process of interviewing for an editorial position, so if you live in the DC area and have an interest in our subject matter, please send us your resume. Information for the position can be had here.
7.) Finally, here's a special freebie from the archives of Bible Review. It's an article we published in 2005 called The Holy Bible: A Buyer's Guide (pdf). It's an interesting look at the variety of bibles available on the market, from the scholarly to the colloquial. The author, Leonard Greenspoon, reviews them all and compares one common passage, Genesis 1:1-2, from each version.
Ken
1.) The latest issue of BAR has entered the mail stream and our subscribers should be receiving it shortly. The cover article is about Galilee in Jesus' time and the cover picture itself is of Pan, the god of the forests, from a first century A.D. altar in Beth Shean. Another article of note concerns the rediscovery of a site that was reburied almost a hundred years ago containing the forgotten tombs of two Israelite kings. We also continue our celebration of the sixtieth anniversary of the Dead Sea Scrolls with interviews of Geza Vermes and Lawrence Schiffman.
2.) For those of you who don't subscribe, the issue should be on the newsstand within two or three weeks. If you'd like to subscribe, here's the link.
3.) For our premier members, the May/June 07 issue is now available in the archive. (If you'd like to be a premier member, with all of the benefits that entails, you can sign up here.)
3.) Our editor has just completed a report from a conference we sponsored in January in Jerusalem concerning recently allegations of the authenticity of certain items in the Israel Museum's collection. A free download of the report can be had here. The page also has an audio selection where you can listen to Gabriel Barkay present his 10 key points for judging the authenticity of items.
4.) Hershel has just completed a new book called The Copper Scroll and the Search for the Temple Treasure. I'll let you know when it's available (it should be up on our site in a couple of days), but the fun part is that Hershel will be autographing the first run of copies we sell.
5.) In related news, Hershel has also completed another book on the Temple Mount that will be published by Continuum in the near future. I'm told by reliable people that everything is ready to go and we're just waiting for one or two details to be cleared up before we go to press. Once the book is available, I'll let everyone know where to find it.
6.) We're still in the process of interviewing for an editorial position, so if you live in the DC area and have an interest in our subject matter, please send us your resume. Information for the position can be had here.
7.) Finally, here's a special freebie from the archives of Bible Review. It's an article we published in 2005 called The Holy Bible: A Buyer's Guide (pdf). It's an interesting look at the variety of bibles available on the market, from the scholarly to the colloquial. The author, Leonard Greenspoon, reviews them all and compares one common passage, Genesis 1:1-2, from each version.
Ken
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
The World's Most Endangered Sites
The World Monuments Fund has released its bi-annual list of the world’s 100 most endangered sites. On the list are the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, which badly needs structural repair, and the Jordan River, which has suffered from environmental mismanagement. Here's their global map showing all of the endangered sites on the list. I do have to say I like the zoom function and the small windows letting you preview each site.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
But Did They Have a Beer Frame?
An Italian team digging in Egypt has discovered a bowling alley from the Ptolemaic period.
Monday, June 11, 2007
The Malling of Jerusalem
The first section of a $400-million luxury shopping and residential quarter has opened just outside Jaffa Gate. Designed by Moshe Safdie, the famed architect, the project is credited with being sensitive to the archaeological remains in the area. Keep Reading . . .
Friday, June 8, 2007
The Pyramids of Sudan
An archaeologist from Toronto’s Royal Ontario Museum is unlocking the mysteries of ancient Meroe, in northern Sudan. The area contains more royal pyramids than all of Egypt. Keep reading . . .
Thursday, June 7, 2007
In the Arab-Israeli Crossfire
The recent discovery of Herod’s tomb has prompted the former director of the Holocaust Museum to examine the role archaeological finds play in today’s political disputes. Keep reading . . .
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
Burials Along Temple Mount Halted
Israeli police have prevented further Muslim burials in an area along the eastern wall of Jerusalem’s Temple Mount. Archaeologists say the area was not used as a cemetery in the past, that plots had been sold by people who did not own them and that the area contains priceless ancient remains. Keep reading . . .
Friday, June 1, 2007
A Gospel Hoax?
In a column in The New York Times (March 31, 2007) Peter Steinfels revisits a controversy that has divided New Testament scholars for decades: Did Morton Smith, the late Columbia University professor and an acknowledged giant in the field of ancient history, forge a document that seems to describe a shocking passage in a “secret” version of the Gospel of Mark? Two recent books say “Yes,” but a third volume strongly answers “No.” The author of that third book, Scott Brown, of the University of Toronto, detailed his defense of Smith in a BAR article, “The Secret Gospel of Mark,” which you can read by clicking here:
The Secret Gospel of Mark: Is It Real? And Does It Identify “Bethany beyond the Jordan”?By Scott Brown
The Secret Gospel of Mark: Is It Real? And Does It Identify “Bethany beyond the Jordan”?By Scott Brown
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