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David Olmsted deposited Moabite Stele Translation in Alphabetic Akkadian Shows Early-Jewish / Phoenician Religious Debate Over a Drought (980 BCE) in the group
Biblical archaeology on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoThe Moabite Stele text is a line by line philosophical/religious debate. It was written in Alphabetic Akkadian which was the common trading language of the ancient Mediterranean as evidenced by a growing corpus of texts. The Moabite text is also the earliest archaeological linguistic evidence of Jewish (Judahite) culture yet discovered. This is…[Read more]
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David Olmsted deposited Akkadian Translation of Israelite Gezer Tablet (Calendar) Blames 840 BCE Elijah Drought on Astrology in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoThis early (northern) Israelite student teaching text blames the cause of the 840 BCE Elijah drought on the astrological powers of the Ancient Pagan Paradigm. It shows a Pagan Israel just prior to the Yawist revolution by referencing the gods Hu as the Healer, Su as the shepherd corresponding to the full moon, and the goddess Utu as the Opener of…[Read more]
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David Olmsted deposited Akkadian Translation of Israelite Gezer Tablet (Calendar) Blames 840 BCE Elijah Drought on Astrology in the group
Biblical archaeology on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoThis early (northern) Israelite student teaching text blames the cause of the 840 BCE Elijah drought on the astrological powers of the Ancient Pagan Paradigm. It shows a Pagan Israel just prior to the Yawist revolution by referencing the gods Hu as the Healer, Su as the shepherd corresponding to the full moon, and the goddess Utu as the Opener of…[Read more]
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David Olmsted deposited Three Religiously Themed Philistine Texts in Alphabetic Akkadian (1160-960 BCE) in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoThree previously untranslated Philistine (Sea Peoples) texts are translated in the empire language of Alphabetic Akkadian/Aramaic. Their script style is in the Minoan lineage which began with the Phaistos Disk and continued on with Linear A. Unlike those texts these texts are now fully alphabetic meaning their inner word signs are consonants…[Read more]
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David Olmsted deposited Three Religiously Themed Philistine Texts in Alphabetic Akkadian (1160-960 BCE) in the group
Biblical archaeology on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoThree previously untranslated Philistine (Sea Peoples) texts are translated in the empire language of Alphabetic Akkadian/Aramaic. Their script style is in the Minoan lineage which began with the Phaistos Disk and continued on with Linear A. Unlike those texts these texts are now fully alphabetic meaning their inner word signs are consonants…[Read more]
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David Olmsted deposited Official Text at Serabit el-Khadim in Sinai References Thera Eruption (1620 BCE) in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoTwo early and still readable linear texts were found carved on the walls of turquoise mine L at Serabit el-Khadim in the Sinai of Egypt by William Petrie in 1906. They were never properly translated. These texts were inscribed within bas-relief steles indicating they were officially sanctioned texts. These texts reference a dimmed sun which would…[Read more]
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David Olmsted deposited Alphabetic Akkadian Texts at Serabit el-Khadim Reference Drought and Magic Crafters (1170-1140 BCE) in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoTranslations of three graffiti type texts dating from the last years of ancient turquoise mine at Serabit el-Khadim in the Sinai blame jealousy for an ongoing drought. This drought is continuing due to the lack of magic crafters needed to overcome that negative emotional magic. These texts are in alphabetic Akkadian using a script which derives…[Read more]
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David Olmsted deposited Translations Texts at Egyptian Wadi el-Hol (1550 BCE) in Akkadian in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 4 years, 7 months agoThe inscriptions at Wadi el-Hol just north of Memphis, Egypt are a late variant of Minoan Linear A showing its progression towards alphabetic writing with its treatment of phoneme signs more as wildcard signs able to be followed by any vowel sound. The Minoans were in Egypt during the early 18th dynasty as revealed by Minoan artwork discovered at…[Read more]
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Sabrina Autenrieth deposited Zerstörungswut – The Deliberate Destruction of MonuMentality in Ancient and Modern times in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 4 years, 11 months agoDestruction is an element of human behaviour that is universally present throughout our history. But what are the driving forces behind these violent acts? Can an underlying motivation be recognised in the archaeological record? This article focuses on the destruction and mutilation of monumental architecture and figurative works, and puts them…[Read more]
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Christian Frevel deposited Rezension von Dieter Vieweger, Geschichte der Biblischen Welt (ausführliche Fassung mit Beispielen) in the group
Biblical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years agoVieweger, Dieter: Geschichte der Biblischen Welt. Die südliche Levante vom Beginn der Besiedlung bis zur römischen Zeit. Mit zahlreichen Zeichnungen von Ernst Brückelmann. 3 Bände im Schuber durchgängig vierfarbig mit zahlreichen Abbildungen gestaltet – Gütersloh: Gütersloher Verlagshaus 2019. 1240 S., geb. € 98,00 ISBN: 978-3-579-…[Read more]
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Andrea Sinclair deposited ‘The International Style, Colour and Polychrome Faience’. in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoThe International Style is a theoretical model used to describe various objects from the Eastern Mediterranean Late Bronze Age that exhibit hybrid diagnostic features (iconography, media, form). Resulting in the inability for archaeologists over the past 150 years to identify cultural source. This paper is a reprint of the chapter on colour…[Read more]
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Christian Frevel deposited Reichsinteresse und Lokalpolitik in der Levante im Spiegel der materiellen Kultur in the group
Biblical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoin: R. Achenbach (Hg.), Persische Reichspolitik und lokale Heiligtümer. Beiträge einer Tagung des Exzellenzclusters «Religion und Politik in Vormoderne und Moderne» vom 24.–26. Februar 2016 in Münster (BZAR 25), Wiesbaden 2019, 209-255.
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Christian Frevel deposited State Formation in the Southern Levant – The Case of the Arameans and the Role of Hazael’s Expansion in the group
Biblical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoin: A. Berlejung/A.M. Maeir (Hg.), Research on Israel and Aram: Autonomy, Interdependence and Related Issues. Proceedings of the First Annual RIAB Center Conference, Leipzig, June 2016 (RIAB I) (ORA 34), Tübingen 2019, 347-372.
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Christian Frevel deposited Wo und wann lernt Israel seinen Gott JHWH kennen? in the group
Biblical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoin: Welt und Umwelt der Bibel Nr. 92, 24,2 (2019) 36-43.
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Tatjana P. Beuthe deposited An animal embalming complex at Saqqara in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 8 months agoThis paper is a new examination of the original find context of the Saqqara lion tables (CG 1321–2) in ‘Gallery C’, an underground structure in the Step Pyramid complex. The substructure may date to the 1st millennium BCE, and this structure was likely part of an embalming complex for the Apis or other sacred animals. The adjacent Western Galle…[Read more]
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Tatjana P. Beuthe deposited New Insights into the Step Pyramid Complex: Klasens’ Unpublished Seal Impression Drawings in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 8 months agoThe Egypt Exploration Society archive contains unpublished pencil drawings by A. Klasens of seal impressions found in the Step Pyramid complex of Saqqara. Digitally inked versions of these drawings are published here for the first time. The seal impressions can be sourced to the Northern Galleries of the complex. The impressions were sealed on…[Read more]
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Matthew Suriano deposited No Rest for the Dead – The Reversal of Death in Ezekiel’s Valley of Dry Bones in the group
Biblical archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoEzekiel 37 is based upon Judean mortuary culture, and the revivification of bones is a reversal of death. Rather than a resurrection event, Ezekiel’s metaphor of Israel as a mass of dry bones is based upon the burial customs that occurred inside the family tomb.
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Caitlin Chaves Yates deposited Tell Mozan’s Outer City in the Third Millennium BCE in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 5 years, 12 months agoDuring the third millennium B.C.E., Tell Mozan, ancient Urkesh, expanded to include an extensive outer city. A variety of investigations in the outer city reveal a complex urban environment: a mix of planned and unplanned activity with the environment and large municipal works acting as constraining factors on more localized activity.
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Tatjana P. Beuthe deposited The Two Brothers: A Re-evaluation of Their Kinship in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThe relationship between the ‘Two Brothers’ Nakhtankh and Khnumnakht has been heavily debated since the discovery of their mummies in 1907. Re-examining the coffin inscriptions of these two individuals reveals that Nakhtankh and Khnumnakht were likely uncle and nephew.
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Tatjana P. Beuthe deposited On the validity of sexing data from early excavations: examples from Qau in the group
Near Eastern Archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years agoA brief technical re-examination of a paper by George Mann on the Qau skeletons in the Duckworth collection is undertaken. Taking into account the original data and technical aspects of skeletal sexing, it is shown that old data on skeletal sexing may not always be as unreliable as previously thought. Factors that may introduce errors into this…[Read more]
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