Jump to navigation

  • The BAS Library Explore the Library

  • Demo
  • Magazines
  • Books
  • Encyclopedia
  • Collections
  • Videos
  • Notables
  • FAQs
  • Institutions
  • Winter 2022

⇽Go to BAS Home

Home
Biblical Archaeology Society Online Archive
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • Log In
  • My Account
  • Support
  • Explore the Library

  • Demo
  • Magazines
  • Books
  • Encyclopedia
  • Collections
  • Videos
  • Notables
  • FAQs
  • Institutions
  • Winter 2022

Your Filters

  • (-) Remove Temple filter Temple
  • (-) Remove Jerusalem filter Jerusalem
  • (-) Remove Date » Start date: 1984 filter Date » Start date: 1984
  • (-) Remove Content type: Feature Article filter Content type: Feature Article
  • (-) Remove Authors: Neil Asher Silberman filter Authors: Neil Asher Silberman
  • (-) Remove Authors: André Lemaire filter Authors: André Lemaire
  • (-) Remove Authors: Itzhaq Beit-Arieh filter Authors: Itzhaq Beit-Arieh
  • (-) Remove Authors: Morton Smith filter Authors: Morton Smith
  • (-) Remove Authors: Oded Borowski filter Authors: Oded Borowski
  • (-) Remove Authors: Yigael Yadin filter Authors: Yigael Yadin
  • (-) Remove Authors: Siegfried H. Horn filter Authors: Siegfried H. Horn
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 results

Probable Head of Priestly Scepter from Solomon’s Temple Surfaces in Jerusalem

Inscription containing name of God incised on ivory pomegranate
By André Lemaire
024 BAR recently published a fascinating article by Gabriel Barkay reporting on his excavation of a small rolled silver amulet, dating from the seventh or sixth century B.C. When the amulet was unrolled, it was found to contain the tetragrammaton...
Biblical Archaeology Review, January/February 1984

The Temple Scroll—The Longest and Most Recently Discovered Dead Sea Scroll

How it affects our understanding of the New Testament and early Christianity
By Yigael Yadin
033 On August 1, 1960, I received a letter from a man who identified himself as a Virginia clergyman. The letter stated that the writer was in a position to negotiate the sale of “important, authentic discoveries of Dead Sea Scrolls.” Obviously,...
Biblical Archaeology Review, September/October 1984

The Case of the Gilded Staircase

Did the Dead Sea Scroll sect worship the sun?
By Morton Smith
050 Yigael Yadin’s magnificent edition of the Temple Scroll1—the latest-to-be-published and the longest of all the Dead Sea Scrolls—has been available to scholars in Hebrew for over four years and last year became available in a three-volume...
Biblical Archaeology Review, September/October 1984

Scholars’ Corner: Yadin Presents New Interpretation of the Famous Lachish Letters

By Oded Borowski
074 On January 29, 1935, during the third season of excavations at Tell ed-Duweir, a site thought to be Biblical Lachish, archaeologists discovered a collection of 18 ostraca, or inscribed potsherds. The ostraca had been covered by a thick layer...
Biblical Archaeology Review, March/April 1984

Restoring the Reputation of Lady Hester Lucy Stanhope

A little-known episode in the beginnings of archaeology in the Holy Land
By Neil Asher Silberman
068 069 Lady Hester Lucy Stanhope, granddaughter of William Pitt and daughter of the third Earl of Stanhope, was the first person who ever intentionally excavated an ancient artifact in the...
Biblical Archaeology Review, July/August 1984

Fifteen Years in Sinai

Israeli archeologists discover a new world
By Itzhaq Beit-Arieh
027 028 We were driving south, along the Gulf of Suez, heading for our excavation site when our jeep broke down. Fortunately, it happened on a paved road, before we turned onto the desert track...
Biblical Archaeology Review, July/August 1984

Who or What Was Yahweh’s Asherah?

Startling new inscriptions from two different sites reopen the debate about the meaning of asherah
By André Lemaire
042 New inscriptions from two different sites have reopened the debate about the meaning of asherah, a term often used in the Bible. Is it—or she—a goddess? Is it a holy place? Or perhaps a sacred tree? Or a pole? Or possibly a grove of trees?...
Biblical Archaeology Review, November/December 1984

The Book Albright Never Finished

All efforts at publication now ended
By Siegfried H. Horn
064 One of the greatest Biblical archaeologists of the 20th century, William Foxwell Albright, left an unfinished book manuscript when he died in 1971. But this is no secret to his friends, students and admirers. BAR readers were told of the...
Biblical Archaeology Review, January/February 1984

Search the Library

E.g. 1 Kings 9:28 or 1 Kgs 9:28

Authors

  • (-) Remove André Lemaire filter André Lemaire
  • (-) Remove Itzhaq Beit-Arieh filter Itzhaq Beit-Arieh
  • (-) Remove Morton Smith filter Morton Smith
  • (-) Remove Neil Asher Silberman filter Neil Asher Silberman
  • (-) Remove Oded Borowski filter Oded Borowski
  • (-) Remove Siegfried H. Horn filter Siegfried H. Horn
  • (-) Remove Yigael Yadin filter Yigael Yadin
  • Hershel Shanks Apply Hershel Shanks filter
  • Bill Clark Apply Bill Clark filter
  • Giora Solar Apply Giora Solar filter
  • Lawrence E. Stager Apply Lawrence E. Stager filter
  • Samuel Wolff Apply Samuel Wolff filter
  • Suzanne F. Singer Apply Suzanne F. Singer filter
  • Yizhar Hirschfeld Apply Yizhar Hirschfeld filter

Publication

  • Biblical Archaeology Review Apply Biblical Archaeology Review filter

Content type

  • (-) Remove Feature Article filter Feature Article

Date

  • (-) Remove 1984 filter 1984

Information

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Customer Service
  • Donate
  • Press Room
  • Masthead
  • Contact Us
  • Employment
  • Site Map
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Copyright

Publications

  • Biblical Archaeology Review
  • Bible History Daily
  • Archaeology Odyssey
  • Subscribe to BAR
  • Bible Review
  • Free E-Books
  • Give a gift subscription
  • Manage your subscription

Biblical Archaeology Society Network Links

  • Network Home
  • Events
  • Bible History Daily
  • Donate
  • Biblical Archaeology Review
  • Current Archaeological Digs
  • BAS Library