Researchers have constructed kilns to determine how iron was smelted in ancient Israel. (Haaretz premium)
New research has identified where refugees fleeing Mount Vesuvius’s eruption later settled.
The New York Metropolitan Museum of Art will return a recently purchased gold-gilded Egyptian coffin that turned out to be looted.
$55 million will be invested to renovate several sites in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City, including the Burnt House, the Wohl Archaeological Museum, and the Tiferet Yisrael Synagogue.
A new museum will join the complex of tourist attractions at Latrun, this one honoring Jews who fought in WWII.
The Madaba Plains Project is celebrating 50 years of archaeological work in central Jordan.
Cyrene, Leptis Magna, and other antiquities sites in Libya are being neglected and vandalized since the fall of Gaddafi.
“Israel is hundreds of years overdue for a massive earthquake,” writes Ruth Schuster (Haaretz premium).
Sebastian Fink explains the significance of salt in ancient Mesopotamia.
Wayne Stiles: “The Judean Wilderness illustrates the greener grass we envy.”
Ferrell’s photo of the week is of the Appian Way that Paul traveled as he approached Rome.
Mark Barnes explains why Jesus was baptized in the Jordan River, with reference to the ministries of Elijah and Elisha.
“Kings of Israel is a board game taking place in Israel (the Northern Kingdom) during the reign of its kings up until Israel’s destruction by Assyria. Players are on a team, with each person representing a line of prophets…” BibleX has a list of other Christian board games.
The Institute of Biblical Culture’s new course in March, “Daily Life in Ancient Israel,” will cover topics like agriculture, the calendar, tribalism, and lifecycles.
The topic of the Tyndale House Conference 2019 is “Exploring the Old Testament and Its World.”
HT: Agade, Ted Weis