Elements in The Archaeology of Ancient Israel
Aaron A. Burke and Jeremy D. Smoak, Series Editors
The archaeology of ancient Israel is among the oldest historical archaeologies in practice. In-depth study of the southern Levant from the end of the Bronze Age to the coming of Alexander is made possible through the integration of archaeological, textual, and iconographic sources. These investigations continue to offer new insights into the world of ancient Israel, Judah, and their neighbors, exposing various aspects of the texts that have served as the principal basis for understanding them. Multi-disciplinary approaches that integrate improved readings of biblical texts, new recovery techniques, pioneering scientific analyses, and advances in identity studies have dramatically changed the questions asked and the findings that follow. These developments require both updating traditional interpretations but also compel us to seek to reconstruct perspectives that are not reflected in surviving written traditions. The Archaeology of Ancient Israel offers a collection of volumes that embody these developments, providing readers with the most up-to-date assessments of a wide range of related subjects.
Contact editors: [email protected] and [email protected]
Editorial Advisory Board
Angelika Berlejung, Leipzig University
Andrew Danielson, Harvard University
Marian Feldman, The John Hopkins University
Jonathan S. Greer, Grand Valley State University
Rachel Hallote, Purchase College
Ido Koch, Tel Aviv University
Lauren Monroe, Cornell University
Stefan Münger, University of Bern
Benjamin Porter, The University of California, Berkeley
J. David Schloen, The University of Chicago
Juan Manuel Tebes, Pontificia Universidad Católica Argentina
Naama Yahalom-Mack, Hebrew University
Elements in this series
- Element
Edom in Judah