Browse Items (337 total)
Nineveh: Prism of Sennacherib
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…
Tags: Akkadian, Cuneiform, Hezekiah, Iron Age, Nineveh, Prism of Sennacherib, Sennacherib
Nimrud/Kalhu: Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III - overview
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…
Tags: Assyrian, Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser, Iron Age, Jehu, Kalhu, Nimrud, Omri, Shalmaneser III
Nimrud/Kalhu: Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III - detail 4 of 4
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,…
Tags: Assyrian, Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser, Iron Age, Jehu, Kalhu, Nimrud, Omri, Shalmaneser III
Nimrud/Kalhu: Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III - detail 3 of 4
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,…
Tags: Assyrian, Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser, Iron Age, Jehu, Kalhu, Nimrud, Omri, Shalmaneser III
Nimrud/Kalhu: Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III - detail 2 of 4
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,…
Tags: Assyrian, Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser, Iron Age, Jehu, Kalhu, Nimrud, Omri, Shalmaneser III
Nimrud/Kalhu: Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III - detail 1 of 4
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…
Tags: Assyrian, Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser, Iron Age, Jehu, Kalhu, Nimrud, Omri, Shalmaneser III
Nimrud's Castle: fortifications
This photograph shows a close-up of the fortifications around Nimrod's Castle, including the main defensive wall and its rounded towers. The castle is located in the modern-day northern Golan Heights, on the southern slopes of Mt. Hermon, and guards…
Tags: Castle, Crusades, Galilee, Nimrud's Castle
Nimrud's Castle: aerial view
This photograph shows Nimrud's Castle, which sits on top of a steep hill in the northern Golan Heights, underneath Mt. Hermon. It guarded one of the roads from Tyre to Damascus. This slide looks southwest; in the background is the Huleh Valley and…
Tags: Castle, Crusades, Galilee, Nimrud's Castle
Negev Desert: Middle Bronze Age I Architecture - detail
This photograph shows a reconstruction of how the roof was probably built on a Round House. Wooden beams from the trunk of a nearby tamarisk tree were laid like spokes radiating from the central pillar to the outer wall, and broad, flat stones were…
Tags: Architecture, Negev Desert, Round house
Negev Desert: Middle Bronze Age I Architecture
This photograph shows a simple one-room 'round house' in the Negev Desert that was built around 2,000 BCE. The pillar in the middle of the room supported the roof. It seems that they were used only for sleeping quarters: all cooking ovens and other…
Tags: Architecture, Negev Desert, Round house
Near Tel Dothan: Bronze Bull
This bronze bull was found on a hilltop southwest of Mt. Gilboa, all the way at the northern end of the central hill. When the site was excavated, excavators found an elliptical wall, 70 feet in diameter, inside of which was a large, roughly hewn…
Near Nahal Tabor: Female Figurine
This 6 inch-high clay figurine dates to the Late Neolithic Age (6,000-5,000 BCE), which is the same time that the earliest baked clay vessels were being made. It is the only complete one of its kind from this period, although fragments have been…
Tags: Fertility, Figurine, Nahal Tabor
Nazareth: Church of the Annunciation
This photograph of the modern city of Nazareth, in Lower Galilee, shows the Church of the Annunciation, which was originally built in the 4th century CE by Helen, the mother of the emperor Constantine. It stands over the place where, according to…
Nahal Mishmar: Chalcolithic bronze hoard
These copper objects are part of one of the most famous hoards of objects ever found in the region. The hoard consisted of over 400 items that were found hidden in a cave high in a cliff overlooking Nahal Mishmar, a seasonal river bed near En Gedi,…
Tags: Chalcolithic Period, Hoard, Nahal Mishmar, Ritual
Mt. Gerizim: the Samaritan Temple
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…
Tags: Cult, Mt. Gerizim, Samaritans, Shechem, Temple
Mt. Gerizim: Modern Samaritans
This photograph shows modern Samaritans, one of whom is holding a Torah scroll, on Mt. Gerizim. The Samaritans still practice their religion in much the same way that ancient Jews practiced their religion prior to the destruction of the Temple in 70…
Tags: Cult, Mt. Gerizim, Samaritans
Montfort: aerial view
This photograph shows Montfort Castle ('mountain castle' in Latin), which was built by the Teutonic Order (a German order patterned after the Knights Templar) in the early 13th century. It is located in western Galilee protecting one of the local…
Tags: Castle, Crusades, Galilee, Montfort Castle, Teutonic Order
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
Masada: the synagogue
This photograph shows the synagogue within the fortress of Masada, which is located in the Judaean Desert (note the Dead Sea in the top right of the picture). At the end of the Jewish revolt against Rome in 70 CE, some of the rebels who were part of…
Tags: Dead Sea Scrolls, Jewish War, Masada, Roman
Masada: Roman catapult stones
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…
Tags: Jewish War, Masada, Roman
Masada: aerial view
This aerial close-up of the northern outcropping of the mountaintop fortress of Masada shows the three-tiered Northern Palace that was built by Herod the Great, as well as storehouses and a bath house (at the top of the photograph). The Jewish…
Tags: Jewish War, Masada, Roman
Masada: aerial view
This aerial close-up of the northern outcropping of the mountaintop fortress of Masada shows the three-tiered Northern Palace that was built by King Herod the Great (37-4 BCE), as well as storehouses and a bath house (at the top of the photograph).…
Tags: Jewish War, Masada, Roman
Masada: aerial view
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…
Tags: Hellenistic, Jewish War, Masada, Roman
Maresha: The Sidonian Tomb
This photograph shows the back wall of the Sidonian Tomb at Maresha, called the 'Sidonian' Tomb because of an inscription designates the tomb's deceased as members of a Sidonian colony living at Maresha. Each of the openings on the walls is a…
Maresha: The Sidonian Tomb
This detail photograph is from the 'Sidonian Tomb' at Maresha, so called because of an inscription that says that the deceased were members of a Sidonian colony at Maresha. In this photograph we see a painting of a horse-mounted hunter accompanied by…
Maresha: The Sidonian Tomb
This photograph shows the entrance stairs leading down into the Sidonian Tomb at Maresha, so called because of an inscription that says that the deceased who were buried here were members of a Sidonian community in Maresha. The paintings on the walls…
Maresha: The Sidonian Tomb
This detail photograph is from the 'Sidonian Tomb,' so called because of an inscription that says that the deceased were members of a Sidonian colony living at Maresha. In this photograph we see paintings of animals from Egypt, along with their Greek…
Madaba: Madaba Map
This map was found to be part of the mosaic floor of a 6th century CE church in Madaba, Jordan (east of the Dead Sea), and includes this map of Byzantine Jerusalem. A broad, column-lined street runs from the north gate south through the center of the…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Byzantine, Damascus Gate, Jerusalem, Madaba, Madaba Map, Map, Roman
Madaba: Madaba Map
This map was found to be part of the mosaic floor of a 6th century CE church in Madaba, Jordan (east of the Dead Sea), and includes this map of Byzantine Jerusalem. A broad, column-lined street runs from the north gate south through the center of the…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Damascus Gate, Jerusalem, Madaba, Madaba Map, Map
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
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…
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
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
Lower Galilee
This photograph shows the Jezreel Valley, which separates the central hills from Lower Galilee. The Via Maris (the road that runs north from Egypt along the coast) cuts through the Jezreel Valley on its way to Damascus. Southern Galilee, known as…
London, England: Edward Gibbon
Edward Gibbon, pictured here, was an English historian and a member of the British Parliament. He wrote a 6-volume work called The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire between 1776-1788. Although he was widely criticized for treating…
Tags: Edward Gibbon, Roman
Lawrence of Arabia
These two photographs show the actual T. E. Lawrence (on the left) and the other of the actor Peter O'Toole, who played Lawrence in the famous movie Lawrence of Arabia. T. E. Lawrence was a British Army officer who was trained as an archaeologist…
Land of Israel/Palestine: satellite photo
This satellite photograph of Israel/Palestine shows the main geographical markers that define the borders of the country. The two bodies of water are the Sea of Galilee (in the north) and the Dead Sea (in the south). Flowing between them from north…
Kidron Valley: Mar Saba
This monastery in the Judaean Desert, initially called the Great Laura and later Mar Saba (after its founder, Sabas of Cappadocia), was built in 483 CE. It is the result of Byzantine-era hermetic monasticism: in 457 CE, at the age of 18, Mar Saba…
Tags: Byzantine, Kidron Gorge, Mar Saba, Monastery
Judaean Desert
The Judaean Desert is located east of Jerusalem (which is in the distance, at the top of the hill) and is formed by the topography of the Central Hill descending toward the Jordan Valley and the Dead Sea (the lowest place on earth). It is very dry,…
Tags: Central Hill, Jerusalem, Judaean Desert
Jordan River: north of the Sea of Galilee
The main source of the Jordan River is located near Banias (Caesarea Philippi), 1,312 feet above sea level. It drops down into the Huleh Valley and then down to the Sea of Galilee and from there down to the Dead Sea (1,300 feet below sea level). This…
Jordan River
This is a view of the Upper Jordan River, North of the Sea of Galilee. The main source of the Jordan River is located near Banias (Caesarea Philippi), 1,312 feet above sea level. It drops down into the Huleh Valley and then down to the Sea of…
Jordan River
This is a view of the Jordan River, south of the Sea of Galilee. The River flows from north to south on the eastern edge of Israel/Palestine. It is neither wide nor deep, and so provides no defensive advantages. The River flows through the Jordan…
Jerusalem: Yitzhak Rabin
This is a photograph of Yitzhak Rabin, who was the Israeli Prime Minister who signed the Oslo Peace Accords with Yassir Arafat (the Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization) in 1993. He was assassinated in 1995 by a Israeli man who was…
Tags: Oslo Accords, Yitzhak Rabin