21 Mar 2019 Salvage excavations at Tel Beit Shemesh, March 17, 2019. citing the olive oil industries discovered in neighboring Tel Miqne and Tel Batash 

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14, Miqne INE.4.392/1 · View, Bowl, large, Household/Utility, 1200BCE - 1150BCE, Iron Age I, Tel Miqne/Ekron, Israel/Shephelah. 16, Qedesh K09P046 · View 

Tel Miqne-Ekron Final Field Report Series 8. Jerusalem:  In addition to directing the JVRP, he is also Co-Director of the Tel Aviv having served on the staff of both the Tel Miqne and Huqoq excavations in that capacity. Tel Miqne-Ekron: Report of the 1994 Spring Excavations Field IISW : The Olive Oil Industrial Zone of the Late Iron Age II : Text, Data Base, and Plates. Ancient Ekron (Tel Miqne). Tel Miqne -- Ekron -- 1996 Photos (Antiquity of Man). Tell Miqne appears to be the site of biblical Ekron.

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Harvard Semitic Museum Publications. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2016. Ekron 14/1-2 S. Gitin, ed., Tel Miqne-Ekron Material Culture Reports (Parts 1 and 2). Tel Miqne-Ekron Final Report Series 14/1-2. Harvard Semitic Museum Publications.

es-Safi/Gath, Tel Miqne/Ekron, Ashkelon), we compared habitat associations of these palaeo-assemblages to observations on modern plants and animals from 

Tel Miqne-Ekron Project Office . W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research .

la aproximativ 63 km sud de Tel-Aviv si la 16 km nord de Gaza, solul fertil si în orasele din interiorul Tării Sfinte: Ekron (Tel Miqne) si Timna (Tel Batas).

Tel miqne

Pris: 932 kr. inbunden, 2017. Skickas inom 6-8 vardagar. Köp boken Tel Miqne 9/2 av Seymour Gitin (ISBN 9781575069579) hos Adlibris. Fri frakt.

Tel miqne

This indi-cates that Lachish was destroyed before Monochrome pottery was produced at Tel Miqne, no earlier than the mid-12th century B.C.E. Warren and Hankey concluded that Tel-Miqne is the biblical city of Ekron. Due to its olive industry, the city became prominent during Iron Age II (roughly 1000–586 BC). Findings from Tel-Miqne have shed light on the policies of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, which dominated the region during the Bible’s divided monarchy period (beginning in 1 Kings 12).
Representation avdragsgill kostnad

Tel miqne

In Seymour Gitin and William Dever (ed.). Recent Excavations in Israel: Studies in  Competing material culture: Philistine settlement at Tel Miqne -Ekron in the early Iron Age. Abstract. This dissertation explores the changing role of material  The Olive Oil Industry at Tel Miqne-Ekron in the Late Iron Age. D Eitam.

Harvard Semitic Museum Publications. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2016.
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Pris: 1769 kr. inbunden, 2016. Skickas inom 5-7 vardagar. Köp boken Tel Miqne 9/1 and 9/3B (2-vol. set) av Trude Dothan (ISBN 9781575069562) hos Adlibris.

The most extensive study of this class of objects, by Rolf A. Stucky, contains 91 complete and fragmen-tary items (Stucky 1974).1 More recent research, including the present study, has added 28 examples to the corpus, now totaling 119 items2 (Reese 1988: 38-39; Bible Lands Museum 1992: 92; Reese and Tel Miqne-Ekron Field IV Lower—The Elite Zone, The Iron Age I and IIC, The Early and Late Philistine Cities, Parts 9/1-9/3B present the evidence of two large Philistines cites, one in Iron I, the period of its initial development, and the other in Iron IIC, its final stage when it achieved its zenith of physical growth and prosperity. Tel Miqne-Ekron Project Office . W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research . P.O.B. 19096, 91 190 Jerusalem, Israel Tel Miqne 9/2. The Iron Age IIC: Late Philistine City. Seymour (Sy) Gitin, Trude Dothan, Yosef Garfinkel, with contributions by David Ben-Shlomo, Amir Golani, Baruch Brandl, Ianir Milevski, Edward F. Maher, Brian Hesse, Omri Lernau, Erik Steinbach, and Alexandra S. Drenka Tel Miqne is a low mound, almost indistinguishable from Kibbutz Ramat Rahel’s cotton and wheat fields, which both surround it and, at the time, covered it.

EXCAVATIONS The Tel Miqne excavations, begun in 1981, were concluded in 1996 after 14 seasons of fieldwork. The project was sponsored by the W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research and the Institute of Archaeology of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and directed by T. Dothan and S. Gitin.

W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research . P.O.B. 19096, 91 190 Jerusalem, Israel . Preface . This volume is the stratigraphic report of the excavations Tel Miqne is a low mound, almost indistinguishable from Kibbutz Ramat Rahel’s cotton and wheat fields, which both surround it and, at the time, covered it. Little did we know then that half the height of the tell was masked by the sediment from a nearby wadi; d much of the tell was simply hidden below the surrounding cotton fields. Tel Miqne-Ekron: A Type Site for the Inner Coastal Plain in the Iron Age II Period.

Due to its olive industry, the city became prominent during Iron Age II (roughly 1000–586 BC). Findings from Tel-Miqne have shed light on the policies of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, which dominated the region during the Bible’s divided monarchy period (beginning in 1 Kings 12). Tel Miqne 9/2 The Iron Age IIC: Late Philistine City Seymour (Sy) Gitin, Trude Dothan, Yosef Garfinkel, with contributions by David Ben-Shlomo, Amir Golani, Baruch Brandl, Ianir Milevski, Edward F. Maher, Brian Hesse, Omri Lernau, Erik Steinbach, and Alexandra S. Drenka Description: Tel Miqne (Khirbet el-Muqanna‘), 22 miles southwest of Jerusalem (map reference 1356.1315), identified with biblical Ekron, one of the capitals of the Philistine Pentapolis. TEL MIqNE–EkRON EXCAVATIONS Trude Dothan and Seymour Gitin, Principal Investigators and Project Directors W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research, Jerusalem Institute of Archaeology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Ekron 9/1 Trude Dothan, Yosef Garfinkel, and Seymour Gitin, Tel Miqne–Ekron Ekron, ancient Canaanite and Philistine city, one of the five cities of the Philistine pentapolis, and currently identified with Tel Miqne (Arabic: Khirbat al-Muqannaʿ), south of the settlement of Mazkeret Batya, central Israel. Although it was allocated to Judah after the Israelite conquest Tel Miqne-Ekron Field IV Lower—The Elite Zone, The Iron Age I and IIC, The Early and Late Philistine Cities, Parts 9/1-9/3B present the evidence of two large Philistines cites, one in Iron I, the period of its initial development, and the other in Iron IIC, its final stage when it achieved its zenith of physical growth and prosperity.