Browse Items (75 total)

  • Tags: Roman

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0173_BibArch081.jpg

The large stones visible in the foreground of this picture are catapult stones that were used in the Roman siege of the Judaean desert fortress of Masada (in 73 CE). They are obviously very large and very heavy, and were made by the Roman soldiers…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0168_NewTestaArch009.jpg

This aerial photograph of the southern portion of the city of Caesarea Maritima shows the huge theater that looks out toward the ocean and the setting sun. The land that juts out into the ocean at the lower left corner of the photo is the so-called…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0171_BibArch059.jpg

This theater is an example of both a new custom and a new architectural form brought eastward by the conquests of Alexander the Great and the Romans. Theater was a Greek invention, but many (if not most) of the Hellenistic 'influences' came to…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0174_BibArch107.jpg

This building is a mausoleum, i.e. a monumental burial structure, from the 2nd-3rd century CE. Bodies were placed inside the building in sarcophagi (lidded coffins carved out of limestone). Mausolea are extremely rare in Roman Palestine. The two…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0170_BibArch060.jpg

The Romans are well known for having built stone-paved roads in order to speed communication and enable the army to move more efficiently. They built an extensive road network that connected the main cities of all of their provinces. This one led…

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http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0169_NewTestaArch008.jpg

This aerial photograph shows one of the great engineering feats of antiquity: the enclosed harbor at Caesarea Maritima. The coast of Israel/Palestine has few good natural harbors, so King Herod built one using the state-of-the-art technology of…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0172_BibArch087.jpg

This monumental stairway is all that still exists of the monumental temple that King Herod the Great (37-4 BCE) erected and dedicated to the Roman Emperor Caesar Augustus. The temple's foundations were laid directly over the top of the palaces of the…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0166_NewTestaArch011.jpg

This photograph shows the aqueduct that fed the city of Caesarea Maritima, a port city (notice the waves of the Mediterranean on the left) that King Herod the Great built nearly from scratch between 25-13 BCE. The monumental aqueduct stretches north…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0167_NewTestaArch010.jpg

This photograph shows one of the city streets in Caesarea, which was built by King Herod as a port city on the Mediterranean cost. Two seated statues can be seen facing each other across the street. When Herod's son Archaeleus was deposed in 6 CE,…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0159_NewTestaArch174.jpg

This photograph shows in the inside relief of the Arch of Titus, located near the eastern entrance to the Forum in Rome. The arch was erected by emperor Domitian, Titus' brother, to honor and commemorate the defeat of the Jews and the capture and…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0149_DeadSeaSc012.jpg

This photograph shows the outside of Cave 1, which, according to the common story, is what the two Bedouin shepherd boys saw and threw a rock into, hoping to find a lost goat. Instead, they heard the crash of broken pottery and found the first of the…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0160_NewTestaArch173.jpg

This photograph shows the Arch of Titus, erected near the eastern entrance to the Forum of the city of Rome to honor Titus's defeat of the Jews and the taking of Jerusalem in 70 CE. The inscription at the top reads 'The Roman Senate and People…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0148_DeadSeaSc013.jpg

This photograph shows the inside of Cave 1, the first of 11 Judaean Desert caves that were found to contain the Dead Sea Scrolls. Seven intact scrolls came from this cave, including the two oldest copies of the book of Isaiah (they date to the late…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0155_AncNearEastIn125.jpg

This photograph shows what one of the Dead Sea Scrolls looked like when it was found (before it was unrolled). Though a scroll in this state is much easier to deal with than others that were broken into thousands of fragments, the 2,000 year-old…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0154_AncNearEaIn126.jpg

The Great Isaiah Scroll is one of the largest and best-preserved scrolls from the Dead Sea Scrolls and was probably produced around 100 BCE. The entire cache of Dead Sea Scrolls, which were initially found by some Bedouin in caves near the Dead Sea

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0161_NewTestaArch019.jpg

This aerial photograph, looking southeast, shows the mountaintop fortress of Masada, located in the Judaean Desert, which rises 400 feet above the Dead Sea. King Herod (37-4 BCE) built two palaces on top, and the Northern Palace is visible here. Note…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0150_DeadSeaSc011.jpg

This photograph shows what the limestone cliffs in the region around Qumran look like, which makes it easier to understand how the Dead Sea Scrolls could have been hidden for nearly 2,000 years without being discovered. Cave 1 is in the upper left of…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0147_DeadSeaSc014.jpg

The jars in this picture are the same type of jar inside of which the scrolls from Cave 1 were found. Its unusual shape suggests that it may have been made specifically for storing scrolls. The same sort of pottery, as well as a potter's kiln, were…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0146_DeadSeaSc015.jpg

The two men in this photograph, Jum'a Muhammed (on the left) and Muhammed edh-Dhib (on the right) are the two Ta'amireh Bedouin cousins who claim to have discovered the first Dead Sea Scrolls in Cave 1 in 1947. Details of the discovery differ, but…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0145_DeadSeaSc017.jpg

After the Dead Sea Scrolls from Cave 1 were found by the Bedouin and taken to Bethlehem, they ended up in front of Eleazar Sukenik, a professor and archaeologist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, who is the man in this picture. He was the first…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0143_DeadSeaSc021.jpg

The light colored, curved shape on the left in this photograph is the roof the Shrine of the Book, a building within the Israel Museum in Jerusalem that houses the Dead Sea Scrolls. The roof was designed to look like the lid of one of the jars inside…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0140_DeadSeaSc033.jpg

This aerial photograph shows the settlement of Qumran, which is located in the Judaean Desert, which is probably where a group of people known as the Essenes lived between ca. 150 BCE and 72/73 CE. Most scholars think that the people who lived here…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0142_DeadSeaSc031.jpg

This photograph shows the marl terraces of Qumran, upon which the ancient settlement was built. The Qumran Caves 4 and 5 are pictured near the center of the image. The wadi (dry riverbed) flows with water after fresh rains. The Dead Sea is visible in…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0141_DeadSeaSc030.jpg

This photograph of the Qumran settlement, taken from a nearby cave, shows the marl terrace where caves 4 and 5 were found, the settlement, and the Dead Sea in the background.

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0144_DeadSeaSc019.jpg

The first of the Dead Sea Scrolls were found by Bedouin in 1947 in the Judaean Desert, who took them to an antiquities dealer in Bethlehem named Kando. Kando took four of the scrolls to St. Mark's Monastery in the Old City of Jerusalem, where he…

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