Browse Items (27 total)

  • Chronology Archaeological contains "{Persian Period}"

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0118_Extra130.jpg

This maps shows the Persian divisions (also known as provinces, or pahva in Persian) of Israel/Palestine: Samaria, Judah, Idumaea, Ashdod, Ammon, and Moab.

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0128_JeruArch037.jpg

After the decree of the Persian King Cyrus the Great allowed Jews to return to Jerusalem from Babylon (ca. 538 BCE), they began to rebuild the city. Seen here are a few of the remains of that building project, which was executed over the following…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0125_ArchRelig063.jpg

This aerial photograph looking north at Mt. Gerizim, which is located in the northern part of the Central Hill, shows the remains of the Samaritan Temple. The city of Shechem sat in the valley below (a portion of which can be seen on the right and…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0124_ArchRelig127.jpg

These two toy-sized ceramic horses with riders are known from the Persian period. They are usually found in a favissa (a repository at a shrine used for objects that had gained sanctity by use in cult ritual and could not, therefore, be returned to a…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0123_AncNearE025.jpg

When the Persian king Cyrus II (557-529 BCE) conquered Babylon in 539 BCE, he had this ten-inch-long clay barrel made and inscribed in the Babylonian language. In the text he says that his victory was made possibly by support of Marduk, the god of…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0127_BibArch130.jpg

All three of these vessels can be dated to the late 6th or early 5th century BCE, during the first decades of Persian control of Palestine. However, pottery forms do not change simply because the political control does. As a result, these forms look…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0122_AncNearE097.jpg

The Elephantine Papyri are correspondences of a Jewish military garrison who occupied an island in the Nile River on ancient Egypt's southern border. They had a temple in which the god of Israel was worshiped under the name Yhwh ('Yahu'), and in this…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0121_AncNearE120.jpg

Money was invented in the Persian Period, and this particular coin bears the official name of the district in which the Jews lived: 'Yehud' (spelled out by the three letters to the right of the bird). The script is ancient Hebrew and the name is the…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0120_BibArch131.jpg

This beautiful urn was made by a well known Greek potter and vase painter around 450 BCE. It was imported to Judah and found in the ruins of a Persian grain storage center at Tel Jemmeh. The reason that an elegant urn from Greece ended up in Judah is…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0116_GalilArch035.jpg

These three figurines of pregnant women wearing Egyptian wigs and holding one hand on their stomachs are typical of figurines found at other Phoenician sites in Lebanon, Cyprus, and Israel in the Persian period. Scholars usually assume that they were…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0110_JeruArch11.jpg

This view of the eastern slope of the City of David shows the steps leading down to the Gihon Spring (at the bottom of the photo, in the triangular shadow beneath the double window), 8th-7th century BCE walls and a Jebusite wall (immediately below…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0117_Extra129.jpg

This map shows the extent of the Persian Empire in 500 BCE. With a capital in Persepolis (down and to the right of the center of the map), they expanded their borders all the way into India in the east and to Egypt, North Africa, and Macedonia in the…

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/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/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/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/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/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/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/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/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/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…

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