Summary and discussion of the work of the Nazareth Archaeological Project between 2004-2010, focussing on the discovery of a first-century AD house below the 'lost' Byzantine 'Church of the Nutrition', said to have been built over the house where Jesus Christ was brought up
Since 2010 the Nativity Church in Bethlehem underwent a number of significant restoration works, inc...
2019/05/14. This lecture’s title sounds like a sensationalized claim about a stunning archaeological...
The subject of the Historical Jesus is perhaps the most popular religious topic in settings such as ...
First discovered by accident in 1884 – and thereafter informally investigated by workmen, nuns and c...
Although Nazareth has usually been seen by scholars as a relatively minor Byzantine pilgrimage centr...
This book transforms archaeological knowledge of Nazareth by publishing over 80 years of archaeologi...
Although relatively little archaeological work has been done on the site of the alleged cenaculum in...
Recent studies of the historical Jesus have placed greater emphasis on the spaces and places that we...
Winter 2012 issue of the Archaeology newsletter, DigSight. Features the article The “Jesus Family T...
Archaeologists and historians have sought to understand the architecture of the early church using m...
The recent broadly debated discoveries, which apparently designate the graves of Jesus of Nazareth's...
In 2010, excavation work concentrated on the area east of the domus of the North-East Church between...
This book presents a new social and economic interpretation of Roman-period and Byzantine Nazareth a...
RESUME The Significance of the Archaeological Excavations in Galilee for the Interpretation of the G...
There is a general consensus among New Testament scholars that the historical Jesus was itinerant. M...
Since 2010 the Nativity Church in Bethlehem underwent a number of significant restoration works, inc...
2019/05/14. This lecture’s title sounds like a sensationalized claim about a stunning archaeological...
The subject of the Historical Jesus is perhaps the most popular religious topic in settings such as ...
First discovered by accident in 1884 – and thereafter informally investigated by workmen, nuns and c...
Although Nazareth has usually been seen by scholars as a relatively minor Byzantine pilgrimage centr...
This book transforms archaeological knowledge of Nazareth by publishing over 80 years of archaeologi...
Although relatively little archaeological work has been done on the site of the alleged cenaculum in...
Recent studies of the historical Jesus have placed greater emphasis on the spaces and places that we...
Winter 2012 issue of the Archaeology newsletter, DigSight. Features the article The “Jesus Family T...
Archaeologists and historians have sought to understand the architecture of the early church using m...
The recent broadly debated discoveries, which apparently designate the graves of Jesus of Nazareth's...
In 2010, excavation work concentrated on the area east of the domus of the North-East Church between...
This book presents a new social and economic interpretation of Roman-period and Byzantine Nazareth a...
RESUME The Significance of the Archaeological Excavations in Galilee for the Interpretation of the G...
There is a general consensus among New Testament scholars that the historical Jesus was itinerant. M...
Since 2010 the Nativity Church in Bethlehem underwent a number of significant restoration works, inc...
2019/05/14. This lecture’s title sounds like a sensationalized claim about a stunning archaeological...
The subject of the Historical Jesus is perhaps the most popular religious topic in settings such as ...