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    Biblical Archaeology_A Very Short Introduction


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      Biblical Archaeology: A Very Short Introduction

      Very Short introductions available now:

      AFRICAN HISTORY

      John Parker and Richard Rathbone

      AMERICAN POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTIONS

      L. Sandy Maisel

      THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY

      Charles O. Jones

      ANARCHISM Colin Ward

      ANCIENT EGYPT Ian Shaw

      ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY Julia Annas

      ANCIENT WARFARE

      Harry Sidebottom

      ANGLICANISM Mark Chapman

      THE ANGLO-SAXON AGE John Blair

      ANIMAL RIGHTS David DeGrazia

      ANTISEMITISM Steven Beller

      THE APOCRYPHAL GOSPELS

      Paul Foster

      AQUINAS Fergus Kerr

      ARCHAEOLOGY Paul Bahn

      ARCHITECTURE Andrew Ballantyne

      ARISTOTLE Jonathan Barnes

      ART HISTORY Dana Arnold

      ART THEORY Cynthia Freeland

      ATHEISM Julian Baggini

      AUGUSTINE Henry Chadwick

      AUTISM Uta Frith

      BARTHES Jonathan Culler

      BESTSELLERS John Sutherland

      THE BIBLE John Riches

      BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY

      Eric H. Cline

      BIOGRAPHY Hermione Lee

      THE BOOK OF MORMON

      Terryl L. Givens

      THE BRAIN Michael O’Shea

      BRITISH POLITICS Anthony Wright

      BUDDHA Michael Carrithers

      BUDDHISM Damien Keown

      BUDDHIST ETHICS Damien Keown

      CAPITALISM James Fulcher

      CATHOLICISM Gerald O’Collins

      THE CELTS Barry Cunliffe

      CHAOS Leonard Smith

      CHOICE THEORY

      Michael Allingham

      CHRISTIAN ART Beth Williamson

      CHRISTIANITY Linda Woodhead

      CITIZENSHIP Richard Bellamy

      CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY

      Helen Morales

      CLASSICS

      Mary Beard and John Henderson

      CLAUSEWITZ Michael Howard

      THE COLD WAR Robert McMahon

      COMMUNISM Leslie Holmes

      CONSCIOUSNESS Susan Blackmore

      CONTEMPORARY ART

      Julian Stallabrass

      CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY

      Simon Critchley

      COSMOLOGY Peter Coles

      THE CRUSADES Christopher Tyerman

      CRYPTOGRAPHY

      Fred Piper and Sean Murphy

      DADA AND SURREALISM

      David Hopkins

      DARWIN Jonathan Howard

      THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS

      Timothy Lim

      DEMOCRACY Bernard Crick

      DESCARTES Tom Sorell

      DESERTS Nick Middleton

      DESIGN John Heskett

      DINOSAURS David Norman

      DOCUMENTARY FILM

      Patricia Aufderheide

      DREAMING J. Allan Hobson

      DRUGS Leslie Iversen

      THE EARTH Martin Redfern

      ECONOMICS Partha Dasgupta

      EGYPTIAN MYTH Geraldine Pinch

      EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY BRITAIN

      Paul Langford

      THE ELEMENTS Philip Ball

      EMOTION Dylan Evans

      EMPIRE Stephen Howe

      ENGELS Terrell Carver

      ETHICS Simon Blackburn

      THE EUROPEAN UNION

      John Pinder and Simon Usherwood

      EVOLUTION

      Brian and Deborah Charlesworth

      EXISTENTIALISM Thomas Flynn

      FASCISM Kevin Passmore

      FEMINISM Margaret Walters

      THE FIRST WORLD WAR

      Michael Howard

      FOSSILS Keith Thomson

      FOUCAULT Gary Gutting

      FREE SPEECH Nigel Warburton

      FREE WILL Thomas Pink

      THE FRENCH REVOLUTION

      William Doyle

      FREUD Anthony Storr

      FUNDAMENTALISM Malise Ruthven

      GALAXIES John Gribbin

      GALILEO Stillman Drake

      GAME THEORY Ken Binmore

      GANDHI Bhikhu Parekh

      GEOGRAPHY

      John Matthews and David Herbert

      GEOPOLITICS Klaus Dodds

      GERMAN LITERATURE

      Nicholas Boyle

      GLOBAL CATASTROPHES

      Bill McGuire

      GLOBAL WARMING Mark Maslin

      GLOBALIZATION Manfred Steger

      THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND THE NEW DEAL

      Eric Rauchway

      HABERMAS James Gordon Finlayson

      HEGEL Peter Singer

      HEIDEGGER Michael Inwood

      HIEROGLYPHS Penelope Wilson

      HINDUISM Kim Knott

      HISTORY John H. Arnold

      THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY

      Michael Hoskin

      THE HISTORY OF LIFE

      Michael Benton

      THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE

      William Bynum

      THE HISTORY OF TIME

      Leofranc Holford-Strevens

      HIV/AIDS Alan Whiteside

      HOBBES Richard Tuck

      HUMAN EVOLUTION

      Bernard Wood

      HUMAN RIGHTS Andrew Clapham

      HUME A. J. Ayer

      IDEOLOGY Michael Freeden

      INDIAN PHILOSOPHY Sue Hamilton

      INTELLIGENCE Ian J. Deary

      INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION

      Khalid Koser

      INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

      Paul Wilkinson

      ISLAM Malise Ruthven

      JOURNALISM Ian Hargreaves

      JUDAISM Norman Solomon

      JUNG Anthony Stevens

      KABBALAH Joseph Dan

      KAFKA Ritchie Robertson

      KANT Roger Scruton

      KIERKEGAARD Patrick Gardiner

      THE KORAN Michael Cook

      LAW Raymond Wacks

      LINCOLN Allen C. Guelzo

      LINGUISTICS Peter Matthews

      LITERARY THEORY Jonathan Culler

      LOCKE John Dunn

      LOGIC Graham Priest

      MACHIAVELLI Quentin Skinner

      THE MARQUIS DE SADE John Phillips

      MARX Peter Singer

      MATHEMATICS Timothy Gowers

      THE MEANING OF LIFE

      Terry Eagleton

      MEDICAL ETHICS Tony Hope

      MEDIEVAL BRITAIN

      John Gillingham and Ralph A. Griffiths

      MEMORY Jonathan Foster

      MODERN ART David Cottington

      MODERN CHINA Rana Mitter

      MODERN IRELAND Senia Paýeta

      MODERN JAPAN

      Christopher Goto-Jones

      MOLECULES Philip Ball

      MORMONISM

      Richard Lyman Bushman

      MUSIC Nicholas Cook

      MYTH Robert A. Segal

      NATIONALISM Steven Grosby

      NELSON MANDELA Elleke Boehmer

      THE NEW TESTAMENT AS LITERATURE

      Kyle Keefer

      NEWTON Robert Iliffe

      NIETZSCHE Michael Tanner

      NINETEENTH-CENTURY BRITAIN

      Christopher Harvie and H. C. G. Matthew

      THE NORMAN CONQUEST

      George Garnett

      NORTHERN IRELAND

      Marc Mulholland

      NOTHING Frank Close

      NUCLEAR WEAPONS

      Joseph M. Siracusa

      THE OLD TESTAMENT

      Michael D. Coogan

      PARTICLE PHYSICS Frank Close

      PAUL E. P. Sanders

      PHILOSOPHY Edward Craig

      PHILOSOPHY OF LAW

      Raymond Wacks

      PHILOSOPHYO
    F SCIENCE

      Samir Okasha

      PHOTOGRAPHY Steve Edwards

      PLATO Julia Annas

      POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

      David Miller

      POLITICS Kenneth Minogue

      POSTCOLONIALISM Robert Young

      POSTMODERNIS

      Christopher Butler

      POSTSTRUCTURALISM

      Catherine Belsey

      PREHISTORY Chris Gosden

      PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHY

      Catherine Osborne

      PSYCHIATRY Tom Burns

      PSYCHOLOGY

      Gillian Butler and Freda McManus

      PURITANISM Francis J. Bremer

      THE QUAKERS Pink Dandelion

      QUANTUM THEORY

      John Polkinghorne

      RACISM Ali Rattansi

      THE REAGAN REVOLUTION GilTroy

      THE REFORMATION Peter Marshall

      RELATIVITY Russeil Stannard

      RELIGION IN AMERICA

      Timothy Beal

      THE RENAISSANCE JerryBrotton

      RENAISSANCE ART

      Geraldine A. Johnson

      ROMAN BRITAIN Peter Salway

      THE ROMAN EMPIRE

      Christopher Kelly

      ROUSSEAU Robert Wokler

      RUSSELL A. C. Grayling

      RUSSIAN LITERATURE

      Catriona Kelly

      THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

      S. A. Smith

      SCHIZOPHRENIA

      Chris Frith and Eve Johnstone

      SCHOPENHAUER

      Christopher Janaway

      SCIENCE AND RELIGION

      Thomas Dixon

      SCOTLAND Rab Houston

      SEXUALITY Véronique Mottier

      SHAKESPEARE Germaine Greer

      SIKHISM Eleanor Nesbitt

      SOCIAL AND CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY

      John Monaghan and Peter Just

      SOCIALISM Michael Newman

      SOCIOLOGY Steve Bruce

      SOCRATES C. C. W. Taylor

      SOVIET UNION Stephen Lovell

      THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR

      Helen Graham

      SPINOZA Roger Scruton

      STATISTICS David J. Hand

      STUART BRITAIN John Morrill

      SUPERCONDUCTIVITY

      Stephen Blundell

      TERRORISM Charles Townshend

      THEOLOGY David F. Ford

      TRAGEDY Adrian Poole

      THE TUDORS John Guy

      TWENTIETH-CENTURY BRITAIN

      Kenneth O. Morgan

      THE UNITED NATIONS

      Jussi M. Hanhimäki

      THE VIKINGS Julian Richards

      WITTGENSTEIN A. C. Grayling

      WORLD MUSIC Philip Bohlman

      THE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION

      Amrita Narlikar

      WRITING And SCRIPT

      Andrew Robinson

      Available soon:

      EPIDEMIOLOGY Saracci Rodolfo

      FORENSIC SCIENCE

      James Fraser

      INFORMATION

      Luciano Floridi

      ISLAMIC HISTORY

      Adam Silverstein

      NEOLIBERALISM

      Manfred Steger and Ravi K. Roy

      PRIVARY Raymond Wacks

      For more information visit our web sites

      www.oup.co.uk/general/vsi/

      www.oup.com/us

      BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY

      A Very Short Introduction

      Eric H. Cline

      Oxford University Press, Inc., publishes works that further Oxford University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education.

      Oxford New York

      Auckland Cape Town Dar es Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto

      With offices in

      Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam

      Copyright © 2009 by Eric H. Cline

      Published by Oxford University Press, Inc.

      198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016

      www.oup.com

      Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press.

      Cline, Eric H.

      Biblical archaeology : a very short introduction / Eric H. Cline.

      p. cm.

      Summary: “Archaeologist Cline discusses the origins of biblical archaeology as a discipline and what first prompted explorers to go in search of sites that would ‘prove’ the Bible. He surveys some of the sites, including Hazor, Megiddo, Gezer, Lachish, Masada, and Jerusalem. Separate chapters deal with the Hebrew Bible and New Testament, frauds and forgeries, and future prospects.”—Provided by publisher

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      ISBN 978-0-19-534263-5 (pbk.)

      1. Bible—Antiquities. I. Title

      BS621.C55 2009

      220.9’3—dc22

      2009006525

      1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2

      Printed in Great Britain

      by Ashford Colour Press Ltd., Gosport, Hants.

      on acid-free paper

      To my family and my fellow archaeologists

      Acknowledgments

      This book owes its existence solely to the efforts and editing of Nancy Toff, to whom I owe a huge debt. I also owe a large debt of gratitude to my students at George Washington University, upon whom I tried out much of this material in my classes over the course of the past eight years, usually without warning them in advance. Grateful thanks are due to Felicity Cobbing, Israel Finkelstein, David Ussishkin, and Shelley Wachsmann for their assistance in procuring or providing some of the illustrations; to Leah Burrows for her bibliographical research assistance; and to Martin J. Cline, Felicity Cobbing, David Farber, Norma Franklin, Jim West, Assaf Yasur-Landau, and several anonymous readers for their helpful critiques, insights, and editorial suggestions regarding earlier sections or entire drafts of this book.

      Contents

      List of illustrations

      Introduction

      Part I The evolution of the discipline

      1 The nineteenth century: the earliest explorers

      2 Before the Great War: from theology to stratigraphy

      3 The interwar period: square holes in round tells

      4 After 1948: biblical veracity and nationalism

      5 Beyond the Six-Day War: new surveys and strategies

      6 The 1990s and beyond: from nihilism to the present

      Part II Archaeology and the Bible

      7 From Noah and the Flood to Joshua and the Israelites

      8 From David and Solomon to Nebuchadnezzar and the Neo-Babylonians

      9 From the Silver Amulet Scrolls to the Dead Sea Scrolls

      10 From Herod the Great to Jesus of Nazareth

      11 From the Galilee Boat to the Megiddo Prison Mosaic

      12 Fabulous finds or fantastic forgeries?

      Epilogue

      References

      Further reading

      Index

      List of Illustrations

      1 Map of Israel and Judah from 930 to 720 BCE

      2 Captain Charles Warren and Yakub es Shellaby

      Palestine Exploration Fund, London; photo by H.H. Phillips

      3 Stratigraphic levels at Tel Kabri in Israel

      Eric H. Cline

      4 Reproduction of the Gezer Calendar

      Eric H. Cline

      5 Overhead of Areas Kand Qat Megiddo, end of the 2008 season

      Sky View Photography Ltd

      6 Yigael Yadin and others at Megiddo in January 1960

      David Ussishkin

      7 Israel Finkelstein at the Megiddo excavations in northern Israel

      Eric H. Cline

      8 The Stepped Stone Structure in Jerusalem

      Eric H. Clin
    e

      9 The Dead Sea Scrolls caves

      Eric H. Cline

      10 The Galilee Boat on display in the Yigal Allon Museum

      Shelley Wachsmann

      Introduction

      The field of biblical archaeology is flourishing today, with popular interest at an all-time high. Millions of viewers watch television documentaries on the Exodus, the Ark of the Covenant, and the so-called Lost Tomb of Jesus. Major publishing houses have published competing Bible atlases, and the popularizing magazine Biblical Archaeology Review reaches a large audience. And every year at Easter, Charlton Heston appears on television as Moses in Cecil B. DeMille’s classic movie The Ten Commandments, raising his arms high to part the waters of the Red Sea so that the Hebrews may cross to safety.

      Biblical archaeology is a subset of the larger field of Syro-Palestinian archaeology—which is conducted throughout the region encompassed by modern Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. Specifically, it is archaeology that sheds light on the stories, descriptions, and discussions in the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament from the early second millennium BCE, the time of Abraham and the Patriarchs, through the Roman period in the early first millennium CE.

      Despite the fact that biblical archaeologists began their excavations in the Holy Land more than a hundred years ago—with a Bible in one hand and a trowel in the other—major questions still remain unanswered, including whether there was really an exodus of the Hebrews from Egypt and the extent of David and Solomon’s empires. Other unresolved issues involve the specific details of daily life during the period of the Divided Kingdoms, after the time of Solomon, and the difference between Canaanite and Israelite material culture during the Early Iron Age.

      1. Israel and Judah from 930 to 720 BCE.

      Most biblical archaeologists do not deliberately set out to either prove or disprove elements of the Hebrew Bible or the New Testament through archaeology. Instead, they investigate the material culture of the lands and time periods mentioned in the Bible, and the people, places, and events discussed in those ancient texts, in order to bring them to life and to reconstruct the culture and history of the region. This is particularly evident in New Testament archaeology, where the excavation of cities like Caesarea, Capernaum, and Sepphoris has shed light on the social, religious, and geographic situation in the time before, during, and after the life of Jesus.

      However, biblical archaeology has generally provided more relevant information that can be correlated with the narratives of the Hebrew Bible than with those of the New Testament. There are several reasons for this disparity. The events depicted in the Hebrew Bible occurred over a much longer time period than those depicted in the New Testament—over millennia rather than over approximately two hundred years. Moreover, the stories and events described in the Hebrew Bible occurred throughout a much larger geographic area than those of the New Testament. The entire Middle East and North Africa provide the backdrop for the stories of the Hebrews, whereas the drama of the early Christians played out mainly in Syro-Palestine and to a lesser extent in ancient Greece and Italy.

     


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