Archaeologists have discovered a Jewish settlement under an abandoned military base near the town of Beit El.
Excavation of a tomb near Jerusalem’s Biblical Zoo uncovered an “afterlife snack pack of nine decapitated toads.”
A lost city of Alexander the Great has been identified at Qalatga Darband, six miles from Iraqi Kurdistan.
The Yeshiva University Museum recently opened a new exhibition, “The Arch of Titus – from Jerusalem to Rome, and Back.”
The Brooklyn Museum has just opened “Soulful Creatures: Animal Mummies in Ancient Egypt.”
The Arab World Institute Museum in Paris is hosting through January 2018 the exhibition, “Oriental Christians: 2,000 Years of History,” featuring artifacts never before displayed in Europe.
BYU has constructed a full-size tabernacle replica.
“The Center for Ancient Middle Eastern Landscapes (CAMEL) at the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago is pleased to present the Anatolian Atlas, an online resource for geographical data related to the archaeology of Anatolia (ancient Turkey).”
The IWC at Tel Aviv University has announced its lecture schedule for the fall all centered around the theme “Jerusalem.”
Malka Z. Simkovich tries to explain why Christian monks copied Jewish manuscripts.
Bill Schlegel has created a new video showing sites in Benjamin from the air.
Wayne Stiles explains the value of using maps in your Bible study.
In light of his recent visit to el-Araj, John DeLancey discusses the two proposed locations for Bethsaida.
Ferrell Jenkins has written a well-illustrated post on Barclay’s Gate in the Western Wall. I suspect that most visitors don’t even know that it exists.
New release: Qedem 57: The Temple Mount Excavations in Jerusalem 1968-1978, Directed by Benjamin Mazar. Final Reports Volume V. Herodian Architectural Decoration and King Herod’s Portico.
Eisenbrauns is selling all available volumes of Excavations and Surveys in Israel for $5 each (with a few restrictions).
The population of Israel is now 8.7 million, including 6.5 million Jews and 1.8 million Arabs.
HT: Ted Weis, Charles Savelle, Joseph Lauer, Agade