From Abram/Abraham to evidence
of a first century Jewish quarter, follow the links for articles with pictures and information for the aforementioned:
Ancient site unearthed in Iraqi home of Abraham
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| Associated Press/Stuart Campbell - This photo taken on March 31, 2013
photo provided by Manchester University professor Stuart Campbell shows
excavation in progress at Tell Khaiber, Iraq. A British archaeologist
says he and his colleagues have unearthed a huge, rare complex near the
ancient city of Ur in southern Iraq, home of the biblical Abraham.
Stuart Campbell of Manchester University's Archaeology Department says
it goes back about 4,000 years, around the time Abraham would have lived
there. It's believed to be an administrative center for Ur. (AP
Photo/Stuart Campbell) |
BAGHDAD (AP) — British archaeologists said Thursday they have
unearthed a sprawling complex near the ancient city of Ur in southern
Iraq, home of the biblical Abraham.
The structure, thought to be
about 4,000 years old, probably served as an administrative center for
Ur, around the time Abraham would have lived there before leaving for
Canaan, according to the Bible. (
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&
Archeological dig in Cologne unearths ancient Jewish history - and exposes layers of prejudice
The citizens of Cologne, known as a city of churches, were happy to
have an excavation in their town - until it started turning up evidence
of a first century Jewish quarter.
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| Photo by Ofer Aderet |
COLOGNE − “We are fighting over history here,” said Dr. Sven
Schuette, as we toured an archaeological dig in this city in western
Germany in late March. “They claim the Jews fell from the sky, that they
are merely guests here, who came and left. But what can you do, the
findings we discovered in the field prove otherwise,” he added
excitedly, as he pointed out the ancient synagogue and ritual bath that
were uncovered in the heart of the city in recent years.
Schuette,
60, specializes in the archaeology of the Middle Ages for the city.
From his office in the oldest section of Cologne, he oversees the
excavation that has had both local residents and elected officials in an
uproar for several years. At the center of the controversy is
opposition both to use of public funds for the project and to the
extended digging that it has entailed in the heart of the city. (
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