Browse Items (39 total)

  • Chronology Archaeological contains "{Iron Age II}"

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0111_JeruArch4.jpg

This map shows the borders of city of Jerusalem from the time of the Jebusites, the settlers of the city prior to the 10th century BCE, to the time of the Judaean king Hezekiah (686 BCE). The current Old City walls (built in the 16th century CE) and…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0109_JeruArch12.jpg

The 50-foot-high stepped structure on the right in this photo was probably built in the pre-Davidic Jebusite period (i.e., prior to the 10th century BCE). The square-cornered tower immediately beyond the stepped structure was part of the east wall of…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0093_JeruArch20.jpg

This photograph shows the excavation of the so-called 'sloping tunnel' that led from the entrance to the Warren's Shaft complex to the vertical shaft. It was clearly carved to allow many people to walk through it simultaneously.

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0097_LasVegas152.jpg

This topographical map of Jerusalem shows the present Old City of Jerusalem in dark blue (the walls of which were built by the Ottoman Turks in the 16th century CE) and the Temple Mount in the southeastern corner of the Old City. The City of David is…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0100_LasVegas189.jpg

This slide, fairly self-explanatory, shows the size and population of Jerusalem between 1,000 BCE and 565 CE. One can see the gradual rise in the city's population and geographical scope, as well as the topographical trajectory of its development:…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0099_LasVegas205.jpg

The photographed image (on the right) and line drawing (on the left) are of one of two Ketef Hinnom amulets. It is a small (1.0 x 3.75 inches), thin sheet of silver on which an inscription was lightly inscribed. It is important because they date to…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0091_JeruArch23.jpg

This photograph shows the exit of the Siloam Tunnel. The small pool in the foreground was, up until 2004, thought to be the Pool of Siloam. However, in that year a larger, lower pool that dates to the Second Temple Period was found just below this…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0098_LasVegas151.jpg

This map shows the City of David, the City of Solomon (north/up the hill), and the expansion of the city to the west, which occurred between the 9th and 7th centuries BCE. It also shows the path of the Siloam Tunnel from the Spring of the Gihon…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0090_JeruArch24.jpg

This photograph shows the inside of the Siloam Tunnel at the 'place of the join' - that is, midway through the tunnel's length, where the Siloam Tunnel Inscription says that two teams, each cutting from opposite ends, met. The pick marks on the walls…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0087_JeruArch18.jpg

This cross-section drawing shows the shaft by which inhabitants of Jerusalem obtained water from the Gihon Spring. In the drawing, 7 is the Gihon Spring, 8 is the city wall, and 1 is the entrance into the tunnel system from inside the city. Water…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0096_BibArch115.jpg

This six-sided prism of baked clay preserves the annals of Sennacherib, who was the king of Assyria from 704-681 BCE. It was written around 689 BCE in the Akkadian language (and cuneiform script). The text contains the records of Sennacherib's eight…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0095_JeruArch16.jpg

This photograph shows the modern entrance to the Gihon Spring (the steps leading down in the background), from the inside of the tunnel. This prolific spring provided water for the inhabitants of Jerusalem in antiquity even in the driest summer…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0094_JeruArch19.jpg

This photograph shows the actual vertical shaft through which people would have lowered buckets from the so-called 'sloping shaft' into the water below. It is unknown when this shaft was created, or even if it was man-made or natural, but it was…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0079_AncNearE71.jpg

The Mesha Stele, also known as the Moabite Stone, is an inscription that was written by Mesha, the king of Moab, in the 9th century BCE. In it he writes that he defeated Omri, the king of Israel. It is the earliest known inscriptional evidence of the…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0088_JeruArch26.jpg

This map shows the plan of the Siloam Tunnel (also known as Hezekiah's Tunnel), which was carved around 701 BCE to reroute the water of the Gihon Spring so that it was accessible to the people living inside Jerusalem's city walls and inaccessible to…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0089_JeruArch25.jpg

This inscription, which was found carved into the wall at the end of the Siloam Tunnel (also known as [King] Hezekiah's Tunnel), tells the story of the carving of the tunnel. It reads, '…the tunneling. And this was how the tunneling was completed: As…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0086_JeruArch17.jpg

This photograph shows the modern entrance steps that lead down to the Gihon spring, which was the water source for the city of Jerusalem in antiquity. When Sennacherib, King of Assyria, came to besiege Jerusalem in 701 BCE, the Judahite king Hezekiah

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0080_ExtraSlides127.jpg

This map shows the ancient Near East and the expansion of the Assyrian kingdom. The core of the Assyrian kingdom was in Assyria (in the upper right portion of the red area), and the red area depicts the kingdom's expansion under Shalmaneser III

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0092_JeruArch22.jpg

This photograph shows the inside of the Siloam Tunnel. The water level is higher in the winter than in the summer, this photograph probably having been taken in the winter. The carved ceiling corners and pick marks are clearly visible. The tunnel…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0085_MesoArch96.jpg

This detail photograph of the Black Obelisk of the Assyrian King Shalmaneser III (858-824 BCE) shows an inscription (at the top, in cuneiform script) that reads, in part, 'The tribute of Jehu (Iaua), son of Omri (Humri); I received from him silver,…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0084_MesoArch95.jpg

This detail photograph of the Black Obelisk of the Assyrian King Shalmaneser III (858-824 BCE) shows an inscription (at the top, in cuneiform script) that reads, in part, 'The tribute of Jehu (Iaua), son of Omri (Humri); I received from him silver,…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0083_MesoArch94.jpg

This detail photograph of the Black Obelisk of the Assyrian King Shalmaneser III (858-824 BCE) shows an inscription (at the top, in cuneiform script), part of which reads: "The tribute of Jehu (Iaua), son of Omri (Humri); I received from him silver,…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0081_AncNearE21.jpg

The Black Obelisk of the Assyrian King Shalmaneser III (858-824 BCE) was carved on all four sides and five registers of reliefs illustrate the obeisance of four rulers from Shalmaneser's western campaigns. It is important for the history of…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0082_AncNearE22.jpg

This detail photograph of the Black Obelisk of the Assyrian king Shalmaneser III (858-824 BCE) shows King Jehu, son of King Omri, kissing the ground at Shalmaneser's feet. The divine symbols of the god Shamash (the winged disk) and the goddess Ishtar…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0070_ArchRelig100.jpg

Six of the eleven altars that were found during the excavation of Tel Miqne (biblical Ekron) stand in front of the excavation's directors, Trude Dothan and Sy Gitin. They concluded that Ekron had a primarily Philistine population in the 7th century…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0076_ArchRelig62.jpg

This artist's rendition of a cult structure at Horvat Qitmit in the eastern Negev Desert has been identified as being Edomite, and as dating to the 7th-6th centuries BCE, on the basis of its pottery. In addition to the pottery, many fragments of clay…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0066_BibArch100.jpg

This shrine model and pillar figurines were not actually found together, but have been photographed together because they are cult objects from the end of the Israelite period (8th-7th centuries BCE). The shrine model was made from an inverted water…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0065_BibArch129.jpg

The pottery shown here is typical of Israelite pottery from the Iron II period (10th-7th centuries BCE). The folded shapes in the foreground are folded lamps. Oil would be placed in the bowl-like part and a wick would be placed in the narrow portion…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0067_GalileeArch34.jpg

The excavations at Tel Dor, on the coast of Israel between Tel Aviv and Haifa, are barely visibly on the rocky promontory in the low center of this photograph. Dor was one of the Phoenician harbors in antiquity, first settled in the 15th century BCE…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0055_GalileeArch32.jpg

This stone-lined pit is 21 feet deep and 34 feet across and was a municipal grain storage silo between ca. 780-650 BCE. There were two winding staircases that went down into it (one of which is visible on the right side of the photograph). Though no…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0063_ArchRelig106.jpg

These pottery stands are shown in situ (as they were left in the 10th century BCE), in a shrine next to the main sanctuary. The stands held bowls, which were found with them. They were used in the temple complex for ritual offering of food to the…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0062_ArchRelig53.jpg

The remains of this well-preserved house temple at Tel Qasile, near the exit of the Yarkon river to the Mediterranean in central Israel, dates to the 12th-10th century BCE. Excavators recovered a number of cult objects such as incense stands and…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0053_GalileeArch26.jpg

This aerial photograph shows the site of ancient Megiddo, the most important city of Lower Galilee in antiquity. It sits at a major crossroads at the western end of the Jezreel Valley. Megiddo was inhabited from the Pre-pottery Neolithic period until…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0052_GalileeArch23.jpg

This photograph shows an intact shrine from inside the Holy of Holies of a small broadhouse temple (i.e., the entrance is on the broad side of the building). It dates to the 13th century BCE. The stones were all cut from basalt, a local rock. Eight…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0059_BibArch55.jpg

This large rectangular building with its double row of pillars was a royal storehouse from the 9th century BCE. Other storehouses like it have been discovered at Megiddo and at Tel Be'er Sheva.

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0050_GalileeArch22.jpg

Hazor, an ancient city and tel that sits at the southern end of the Huleh Valley in eastern upper Galilee, was one of the largest and most important cities in the region from ca 1,900 BCE until 732 BCE when it was destroyed by the Assyrian king…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0056_GalileeArch31.jpg

This photograph shows an underground tunnel that was part of Megiddo's water system, which was built in the 9th century BCE. Water was a precious defensive commodity - if a city had any hope of surviving a siege, they had to make sure that their…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0051_GalileeArch25.jpg

The area with pillars in this photo shows the ancient ruins of a storehouse that dates to the 9th century BCE. The large rooms in the foreground date to the time of Jeroboam II (793-753 BCE). In the background is the snow-covered peak of Mt. Hermon.

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0018_EgyptSinaiNegev091.jpg

This aerial view of Tel Be'er Sheva shows the 8th century BCE outline of the Israelite city and gives an idea of the aridity of the Negev desert. The city was built in the 10th-9th century BCE by first constructing a platform surrounded by a moat.…

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