Myths, of the Da Vinci Code variety, abound that vessels from the ancient Jerusalem Temples are squirreled ... The view that the Temple vessels, or keylim, are in Rome dates back to the early ...
UNESCO told Newsweek it "is gravely concerned about the threats posed by the conflict to the region's rich cultural heritage." ...
The Arch of Titus, in the city’s historic center, was built nearly 2,000 years ago to celebrate the eponymous Roman general’s conquering of Jerusalem and destruction of its Holy Temple.
An excavation at the main drainage channel that ran under the streets of ancient Jerusalem ... the colorful markets of Jerusalem at the foot of the Temple Mount, and along the entire length ...
Yuval Gadot of the Department of Archeology and Ancient Near ... of the people of Jerusalem and the Acropolis (the upper city), which was where the palace and the temple were located and stood ...
the temple, the two palaces—King David's and later the palace of King Solomon—and the wall of Jerusalem around these structures. This was a new wall that King Solomon added to the ancient wall ...
Questions related to literacy in ancient times are not an exclusive prerogative of academic studies on the Israelites.
In the Mordot Arnona neighborhood of Jerusalem, archaeologists discovered an administrative building that was used for taxation in ancient times ... Jerusalem's Second Temple was built with ...
Ancient Israelites burned cannabis as part ... Arad suggest that cannabis also played a role in worship at the Temple of Jerusalem. This is because at the time the shrine in Arad was part of ...
A MODEL OF the Second Temple of Jerusalem. (credit ... “because modern people love numbers and ancient people didn’t. It’s a modernist question.” For example, when discussing the number ...
The crucial thing to remember is that nowadays, there are temples and synagogues everywhere you go. There is not a Jewish community in the world that doesn't have a synagogue, and many of them are ...
Ruled by Hammurabi, restored by Nebuchadrezzar, conquered by Cyrus—this city in the heart of Mesopotamia was both desired and despised, placing it at the center stage of the dawn of history.