A number of lectures related to the archaeology of Jerusalem have now been posted from the Cambridge Symposium held in March 2019.
The official title of the gathering was “The Ancient City of David: Recent Archaeological Exploration of Jerusalem. An Academic Symposium co-organized by Megalim: The City of David Institute and Von Hugel Institute of St. Edmund’s College, Cambridge.”
I’ve organized the available recordings in chronological order by topic. The lectures range in length from 13 to 45 minutes, with most approximately 25 minutes.
Jerusalem in the Old Testament era:
Ronny Reich: The Controversy over Jerusalem’s Fortifications in the Middle Bronze Age
Gabriel Barkay: An Egyptian Temple in Canaanite Jerusalem?
Dan Gil: The Enigmatic Subterranean Waterworks of Biblical Jerusalem
Hagai Misgav: Considerations in the Publication of Epigraphical Finds: The Bulla of “Isaiah the Prophet” – A Case Study
Jerusalem in the New Testament era:
Eyal Meiron: Were the Remains of the Seleucid Akra Fortress Found in Jerusalem?: An Alternative View
Nahshon Szanton: The Dating of the Stepped Street in Jerusalem in Light of the New Excavations in the Tyropoeon Valley
Ronny Reich: Jerusalem as a Pilgrimage City in the Early Roman Period
Avi Solomon, Joe Uziel and Tehillah Liebermann: Jerusalem as Seen from Above – and Beneath – Wilson’s Arch in the Early and Late Roman Period
Hillel Geva: The Upper City in Second Temple Period Jerusalem on the Eve of the Roman Destruction
Additional lectures:
Yosef Garfinkel: The Enigma of the United Monarchy in the 10th Century BC: A View from Hurvat Qeiyafa
Gabriel Barkay: Highlights from the Temple Mount Sifting Project in Jerusalem
HT: G. M. Grena