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Biblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Letters to Pharoah, Jews of Arabia + more

Description: Biblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Canaan's Letters to Pharoah Jews of Arabia + much more !Product Description Biblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Canaan's Letters to Pharoah Jews of Arabia + much more !       Features: Jews of Arabia: Ancient Inscriptions Reveal Jewish Diaspora In the wake of two disastrous revolts against Rome, many Jews left Judah for neighboring lands, including the verdant oases of ancient North Arabia, where inscriptions bear silent witness to the lives of the early Jews who made Arabia their home. Explore what these inscriptions reveal about the Jewish presence at major oasis centers like Tayma, Al-Ula, and Hegra. Gath of the Philistines: A New View of Ancient Israel’s Archenemy A quarter-century of excavations at Tell es-Safi, site of the Philistine city of Gath, has allowed archaeologists to refine longstanding assumptions about ancient Israel’s most feared rivals and how these people of foreign origin integrated into the social and ethnic fabric of the southern Levant. Venture into this thriving metropolis to glimpse the rich and diverse culture of one of the region’s most powerful Iron Age kingdoms. Letters to Pharaoh: The Canaanite Amarna Tablets The Amarna Letters, a collection of cuneiform documents discovered in Egypt, provide a wealth of insights into diplomatic relations between Egypt and the kingdoms and empires of the Late Bronze Age. The letters written from the kings of the Canaanite polities illuminate the social and political realities these rulers faced, as well as the contours of their Canaanite language. Too Good to Be True? Reckoning with Sensational Inscriptions From time to time, the world of biblical archaeology is upended by the discovery of a remarkable inscription. But is it possible that our insatiable appetite for such groundbreaking finds clouds our ability to evaluate them cautiously and fairly? A closer look at a few recent examples sheds light on how our eagerness to find the sensational can lead even experts to jump to inaccurate conclusions.Biblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Canaan's Letters to Pharoah Jews of Arabia + much more ! Features: Jews of Arabia: Ancient Inscriptions Reveal Jewish Diaspora In the wake of two disastrous revolts against Rome, many Jews left Judah for neighboring lands, including the verdant oases of ancient North Arabia, where inscriptions bear silent witness to the lives of the early Jews who made Arabia their home. Explore what these inscriptions reveal about the Jewish presence at major oasis centers like Tayma, Al-Ula, and Hegra. Gath of the Philistines: A New View of Ancient Israel’s Archenemy A quarter-century of excavations at Tell es-Safi, site of the Philistine city of Gath, has allowed archaeologists to refine longstanding assumptions about ancient Israel’s most feared rivals and how these people of foreign origin integrated into the social and ethnic fabric of the southern Levant. Venture into this thriving metropolis to glimpse the rich and diverse culture of one of the region’s most powerful Iron Age kingdoms. Letters to Pharaoh: The Canaanite Amarna Tablets The Amarna Letters, a collection of cuneiform documents discovered in Egypt, provide a wealth of insights into diplomatic relations between Egypt and the kingdoms and empires of the Late Bronze Age. The letters written from the kings of the Canaanite polities illuminate the social and political realities these rulers faced, as well as the contours of their Canaanite language. Too Good to Be True? Reckoning with Sensational Inscriptions From time to time, the world of biblical archaeology is upended by the discovery of a remarkable inscription. But is it possible that our insatiable appetite for such groundbreaking finds clouds our ability to evaluate them cautiously and fairly? A closer look at a few recent examples sheds light on how our eagerness to find the sensational can lead even experts to jump to inaccurate conclusions. Biblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Canaan's Letters to Pharoah Jews of Arabia + much more !Product Description Biblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Canaan's Letters to Pharoah Jews of Arabia + much more !       Features: Jews of Arabia: Ancient Inscriptions Reveal Jewish Diaspora In the wake of two disastrous revolts against Rome, many Jews left Judah for neighboring lands, including the verdant oases of ancient North Arabia, where inscriptions bear silent witness to the lives of the early Jews who made Arabia their home. Explore what these inscriptions reveal about the Jewish presence at major oasis centers like Tayma, Al-Ula, and Hegra. Gath of the Philistines: A New View of Ancient Israel’s Archenemy A quarter-century of excavations at Tell es-Safi, site of the Philistine city of Gath, has allowed archaeologists to refine longstanding assumptions about ancient Israel’s most feared rivals and how these people of foreign origin integrated into the social and ethnic fabric of the southern Levant. Venture into this thriving metropolis to glimpse the rich and diverse culture of one of the region’s most powerful Iron Age kingdoms. Letters to Pharaoh: The Canaanite Amarna Tablets The Amarna Letters, a collection of cuneiform documents discovered in Egypt, provide a wealth of insights into diplomatic relations between Egypt and the kingdoms and empires of the Late Bronze Age. The letters written from the kings of the Canaanite polities illuminate the social and political realities these rulers faced, as well as the contours of their Canaanite language. Too Good to Be True? Reckoning with Sensational Inscriptions From time to time, the world of biblical archaeology is upended by the discovery of a remarkable inscription. But is it possible that our insatiable appetite for such groundbreaking finds clouds our ability to evaluate them cautiously and fairly? A closer look at a few recent examples sheds light on how our eagerness to find the sensational can lead even experts to jump to inaccurate conclusions. Biblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Canaan's Letters to Pharoah Jews of Arabia + much more !       Features: Jews of Arabia: Ancient Inscriptions Reveal Jewish Diaspora In the wake of two disastrous revolts against Rome, many Jews left Judah for neighboring lands, including the verdant oases of ancient North Arabia, where inscriptions bear silent witness to the lives of the early Jews who made Arabia their home. Explore what these inscriptions reveal about the Jewish presence at major oasis centers like Tayma, Al-Ula, and Hegra. Gath of the Philistines: A New View of Ancient Israel’s Archenemy A quarter-century of excavations at Tell es-Safi, site of the Philistine city of Gath, has allowed archaeologists to refine longstanding assumptions about ancient Israel’s most feared rivals and how these people of foreign origin integrated into the social and ethnic fabric of the southern Levant. Venture into this thriving metropolis to glimpse the rich and diverse culture of one of the region’s most powerful Iron Age kingdoms. Letters to Pharaoh: The Canaanite Amarna Tablets The Amarna Letters, a collection of cuneiform documents discovered in Egypt, provide a wealth of insights into diplomatic relations between Egypt and the kingdoms and empires of the Late Bronze Age. The letters written from the kings of the Canaanite polities illuminate the social and political realities these rulers faced, as well as the contours of their Canaanite language. Too Good to Be True? Reckoning with Sensational Inscriptions From time to time, the world of biblical archaeology is upended by the discovery of a remarkable inscription. But is it possible that our insatiable appetite for such groundbreaking finds clouds our ability to evaluate them cautiously and fairly? A closer look at a few recent examples sheds light on how our eagerness to find the sensational can lead even experts to jump to inaccurate conclusions.

Price: 6.73 USD

Location: Brooklyn, New York

End Time: 2024-09-19T18:25:26.000Z

Shipping Cost: 5.69 USD

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Biblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Letters to Pharoah, Jews of Arabia + moreBiblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Letters to Pharoah, Jews of Arabia + moreBiblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Letters to Pharoah, Jews of Arabia + moreBiblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Letters to Pharoah, Jews of Arabia + moreBiblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Letters to Pharoah, Jews of Arabia + moreBiblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Letters to Pharoah, Jews of Arabia + moreBiblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Letters to Pharoah, Jews of Arabia + moreBiblical Archaeology Review Fall 2024 Letters to Pharoah, Jews of Arabia + more

Item Specifics

All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

Publication Name: Biblical Archaeology

ISSN: 0098-9444

MPN: Fall 2024

Publisher: Biblical Archaelogy

Publication Year: 2024

Issue Type: Quarterly

Format: Physical

Publication Frequency: Quarterly

Language: English

Features: Illustrated, Biblical Archaelogy Magazine

Genre: Archaelogy, Biblical, Archaelogist, Pharaoh, Jews, History

Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

Topic: Archaeology, Biblical, History, Architecture, BAR, Hershel Shanks - Founding Editor

Issue Number: Biblical Archaelogy

Publication Month: Biblical Archaelogy, Fall 2024

Unit Quantity: Biblical Archaelogy

Volume: Biblical Archaelogy

Contributors: Biblical Archaelogy Magazine

Signed: No

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