Archaeology and the New TestamentStrange, J
Caves in the Old Testament, the New Testament, and the Qur'an This article deals with the caves mentioned in the Old Testament, the New Testament, and the Qur'an. It highlights all the relevant occurrences of the Hebr... A Shivtiel - 《Jerusalem Journal of Archaeology》 被引量: 0发表...
6thcentury writings of Theodosius and the 4thcentury Byzantine documents that at least one of these is a mortuary monument to three of the revered Nazarenes in the New Testament: Simon the Just, Zacharia the priest, father of John the Baptist and James the Just, son of Joseph and brother ...
Can the Bible be verified? Is there historical evidence? Learn about archaeological evidence for the Old and New Testament. How do dinosaur fossils, the shroud of Turin, Piltdown Man, etc. fit in.
Drawing from Greco-Roman history, Second-Temple Jewish studies, archaeology, the social world of the New Testament, parable studies, and the burgeoning literature on Galilee, The People of the Parables describes life in first-century Galilee as it was experienced by the characters in Jesus' ...
The Pool of Siloam is best known from the New Testament where Jesus sent the blind man to wash and be healed (John 9:7-11). In the Hebrew Bible this pool is mentioned as the “waters of Shiloah that flow softly” (Isaiah 8:6). The waters originated from the Gihon Spring, but that...
The New Testament (Acts 3.2,10) records a notable miracle that was performed at the Beautiful Gate of the Temple. This was the gate where a man who had been lame from birth was begging. When Peter and John saw him, they told him that they did not possess any gold or silver or world...
, The Archaeology and Politics of Food and Feasting in Early States and Empires, Kluwer Academic, New York, pp. 93–142. Google Scholar Brown, L. A. (2001). Production of ritual feasting and village festivals at the Cerén Site, El Salvador. In Dietler, M., and Hayden, B. (eds....
Through information panels in the pub and a visit to canmore, I quickly established a real blind spot in my knowledge of North Lanarkshire archaeology – that there is a putative Roman altar stone in the new town of Cumbernauld. How did I not know this? I guess because it is ‘Roman’...
German-speaking Swiss immigrants from the Appenzell region of Switzerland settled in the South Carolina frontier township of New Windsor in 1737. After initially establishing an insular physical and social relationship with the dominant Anglophone population, the Swiss adopted strategies that increasingly in...