The Synagogue in Ancient Palestine: Current Issues and Emerging Trends Edited by Rick Bonnie /Raimo Hakola /Ulla Tervahauta
Mechael Osband from the University of Haifa said that the findings date back to the third century CE and very little information from that period
Two biblical scenes recently uncovered at a fifth-century synagogue point to a preoccupation with the end of days, and perhaps a rebellious spirit. By AMANDA
. Leibner, Khirbet Wadi Ḥamam: A Roman-Period Village and Synagogue in the Lower Galilee, Qedem Reports 13, The Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Cooperation
Unparalleled mosaics discovered by UNC-Chapel Hill archaeologist and team provide new clues on life in an ancient Galilean Jewish village
SEE THE PROGRAM FOR LECTURES ON ANCIENT SYNAGOGUES THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM THE WEEK OF AUGUST 6 http://www.jewish-studies.org/wcjsprogram_en 208 New Discoveries of First-
New Finds From Huqoq An ancient Galilean synagogue continues to yield stunning mosaics A team of specialists and students led by University of North Carolina
International Conference of the Cluster of Excellence > Synagogues in the Hellenistic-Roman Period New Finds – New Theories – New Methods 13. – 15.06.2017 Click
During the course of rehabilitation and conservation work implemented in the ancient synagogue and nearby Beit Zinati, financed by the Ministry of Jerusalem Affairs and
ABSTRACTS OF CONFERENCE PAPERS The Synagogue in Ancient Palestine: Current Issues and Emerging Trends University of Helsinki, Finland 21-24 September 2016 Booklet of conference program
After several years of digging and study, archaeologists are revealing an extraordinary—and enigmatic—mosaic discovered among the ruins of a Roman-era synagogue at a site in
http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-4841150,00.html
On a hill above the Sea of Galilee in northern Israel, archaeologists have discovered one amazing floor mosaic after another. Archaeologists excavating a Roman-era synagogue
Excavations in the ancient synagogue at Horvat Kur (Israel) dating to the Byzantine period (4th—7th c. CE) have uncovered a partially-preserved colorful mosaic floor. http://kinneret-excavations.org/?p=1788
For the first time, advanced technologies made it possible to read parts of a scroll that was completely burnt c. 1,500 years, inside the Holy