Browse Items (26 total)
- Tags: Bronze Age
Jerusalem: City of David
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…
Jerusalem: map of the period between the Jebusites and Hezekiah
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…
Tags: Bronze Age, Canaanite, City of David, Hezekiah, Iron Age, Jebusite, Jerusalem, Map, Nehemiah, Ottoman Period, Roman Period
Jerusalem: City of David - the Stepped Structure
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…
Tags: Bronze Age, City of David, Iron Age, Jebusite, Jerusalem
Luxor: The Great Harris Papyrus
This wonderfully preserved papyrus, probably created around 1,200 BCE, is one of the longest papyri that has been preserved from ancient Egypt (it is almost 138 feet long). It is divided into three parts; this section is in the part describing the…
Ashdod: Bronze Age chair figure
This miniature clay chair with breasts and head stands 7 inches high and dates to the 12th century BCE. So many fragments of other chair figures such as this were uncovered at Ashdod that they came to be called 'Ashdod' figures. They were…
Tags: Ashdod, Bronze Age, Figurine, Mycenaean, Philistine, Phoenician
Timna: Hathor Mask
This faience mask, discovered at the Temple of Hathor near the copper mines of Timna in the eastern Sinai Desert, was made to be a representation of the goddess. The eyes are characteristically Egyptian, and clearly were colored. It was one of more…
Tags: Bronze Age, Cult, Hathor, Mask, Sinai Desert, Timna
Timna: Temple of Hathor
This photo shows a small one-room temple enclosure near the copper mines of Timna in the eastern Sinai Desert. It was originally built to the Egyptian goddess Hathor in the 14th or 13th century BCE. Later in the 13th or early 12th century BCE the…
Tags: Bronze Age, Cult, Figurine, Hathor, Sinai Desert, Timna
Tel Megiddo: Late Bronze Age cuneiform tablet
This inscription is written in the Akkadian language that used a cuneiform (literally, 'wedge-shaped') script for letters. The earliest examples of writing from Israel/Palestine are in this script and language. This particular fragment is from…
Tags: Akkadian, Bronze Age, Cuneiform, Epic of Gilgamesh, Megiddo, Mesopotamia
Luxor: Merneptah Stele - detail
This close-up of the name 'Israel,' written in Egyptian hieroglyphics, comes from an inscription written on granite during the reign of the Egyptian king Merneptah (1213-1203 BCE). This is the earliest preserved inscriptional evidence of Israel and…
Tags: Bronze Age, Canaan, Hieroglyphs, Israel, Israelites, Luxor, Merneptah Stele, Thebes
Luxor: The Sea Peoples Inscription
This slide shows the second monumental gateway (called by the Greek word for gateway, 'pylon') of the great mortuary temple of Ramses III at Medinet Habu in Thebes. To the left is a relief showing Ramses leading enemy captives, including a row of…
Tags: Bronze Age, Cult, Egypt, Luxor, Medinet Habu, Mortuary Temple, Philistines, Ramses III, Temple, Thebes
Tel Qasile: ceramic cult stands
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…
Tags: Bronze Age, Cult, Iron Age, Philistine, Tel Qasile, Temple
Ashdod: Iron I Philistine Pottery
This distinctive type of painted pottery has been found at sites along the southern coast of Palestine from the 12th and 11th centuries BCE, which has led scholars to conclude that this is 'Philistine pottery,' as the Philistines were known to have…
Tags: Ashdod, Bronze Age, Mycenaean, Philistine, Pottery
Tel Qasile: Philistine temple
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…
Tags: Bronze Age, Cult, Philistine, Tel Qasile, Temple
Tel Megiddo: Canaanite outdoor altar (1)
This aerial photograph shows a huge outdoor altar, up to 5 feet high, that was built in the Early Bronze Age (2850-2650 BCE). The altar was accessed via the steps on the left side of the photo, and excavators found pottery and bones surrounding the…
Tags: Bronze Age, Canaanite, Cult, Megiddo, Temple
Tel Megiddo: Canaanite outdoor altar (2)
The round stone mound in this photo—a Canaanite outdoor altar—is also referred to as a 'high place'. It was built around 2,700 BCE and used up to around 1,800 BCE. A 'high place' ('bamah' in the Hebrew Bible) was a place used for worship, in part…
Tags: Bronze Age, Cult, High Place, Megiddo
Tel Hazor: Shrine of the Stelae
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…
Tags: Bronze Age, Cult, Hazor, Holy of Holies, Temple
Saqqara: Execration Text
This figurine, modeled in unbaked clay, has the form of a kneeling prisoner with his arms tied behind him at the elbows. The writing is hieratic, a script much like Egyptian hieroglyphics; the inscription contains the names of enemies. After it was…
Tags: Bronze Age, Egyptian, Execration text, Hieratic, Saqqara
Luxor: Merneptah Stele - overview
The Merneptah Stele, pictured here, is an inscription written in hieroglyphs on granite during the reign of the Egyptian king Merneptah (1213-1203 BCE). It contains the earliest preserved inscriptional evidence of the name Israel (and perhaps…
Tags: Bronze Age, Canaan, Hieroglyphs, Israel, Israelites, Luxor, Merneptah Stele, Thebes
Jericho: Neolithic Tower
This photograph shows the earliest fortification structure thus far discovered anywhere in the world. It is a circular tower that was probably built around 7,000 BCE and was connected to a massive stone wall. The position of the tower would have…
Tel Megiddo: Cuneiform tablets
The earliest writing preserved from Israel/Palestine are in the form of cuneiform on clay tablets like this one. The cuneiform script and the languages that were written in it (like Akkadian) were developed in Mesopotamia. This tablet fragment…
Tags: Akkadian, Bronze Age, Cuneiform, Gilgamesh, Megiddo, Mesopotamia
Female Figurines from the Late Bronze Age
These three figurines are characteristic of Late Bronze Age molded plaque figurines. All tend to be nude and standing in frontal position. They probably represented the Canaanite goddess Ashtaroth in her role as goddess of love and procreation.…
Tags: Ashtaroth, Bronze Age, Fertility, Figurine
Tale of Sinuhe
The story of Sinuhe has been preserved on numerous papyri and ostraca. This manuscript is written in an Egyptian script called hieratic, which is closely related to Egyptian hieroglyphs, and dates to the Egyptian 12th Dynasty (ca. 1991-1785 BCE). It…
Tags: Bronze Age, Egyptian, Hieratic, Papyrus, Sinuhe
Middle Bronze Age I Pottery
This photograph shows some of the common pottery from the Middle Bronze I period (2,000-1,900 BCE). The basin-shaped vessel in the foreground center with the four pinched corners is an ancient lamp. Oil would be put inside and wicks would run through…
Tags: Bronze Age, Ceramics, Pottery
Early Bronze Age Pottery
This photograph shows some common every-day pottery from the Early Bronze Age (3,300-2,000 BCE). Because archaeologists find more pottery sherds than anything else in an excavation, it is the main source of information for dating the architecture of…
Tags: Bronze Age, Ceramics, Pottery
Tel Arad: Early Bronze Age tower
This photograph of one of the many the Early Bronze Age towers at Arad reveals defenses typical of the period. The towers, 10-12 feet in diameter and found at 65-80 foot intervals, projected out from the wall, thus exposing any attacker attempting to…
Tags: Arad, Bronze Age, Tower
Yiftael: Early Bronze Age I Architecture
The ancient site of Yiftael, in Lower Galilee, has one of the best preserved Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age I (3150-2850) villages in Galilee. This photograph shows the foundations of the round or elliptical houses that comprised a room that was…