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Matthew J. Suriano, Breaking Bread with the Dead: Katumuwa's Stele, Hosea 9:4, and the Early History of the Soul, Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 134, No. 3 (July-September 2014), pp.
The stele’s discovery in 1993 by a team of Israeli archaeologists was so significant it made the front page of The New York Times. The excavation at Tel Dan, the site of an ancient city in ...
Scholars translating a Roman victory stele, erected in the Temple of Isis at Philae in Egypt in 29 BC, have discovered the Roman Emperor Octavian Augustus’ name inscribed in a cartouche – an ...
Merneptah Stele: How this 3,200-year artefact could prove the Bible was RIGHT THE MERNEPTAH Stele is believed by some to contain the first written record of Israel, which a biblical scholar has ...
Updated: 2006-06-01 14:37 An important and ancient stele, inscribed with just 29 Chinese characters and looted by Japanese soldiers early last century, could provide experts with some important ...
A team of Dominican archeologists discovered a limestone stele dating back to the Ptolemaic period (350-30 BC) in the Egyptian Mediterranean coast, according to reports in Dominican newspapers ...
Aref Biglari, Sajjad Alibaigi, Masoud Beyranvand, The Stele of Sarab-e Sey Khan: A Recent Discovery of a Second-Millennium Stele on the Iranian–Mesopotamian Borderland in the Western Zagros Mountains, ...
The stele is accredited to the reign of the pharaoh Apries and may discuss a military campaign of his. One campaign saw him try to fight the Babylonians as they sought to destroy the First Temple.
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