Bible Archaeology Report lists the top ten discoveries related to Ezra and Nehemiah. Every discovery is illustrated by at least one photo, and the post has 27 footnotes pointing to additional resources.
Don Binder gives a little history of the Nea Church in Jerusalem, its excavation in the 1970s, and its inaccessibility ever since.
Bible Mapper has released a clickable, searchable Hebrew calendar that includes festivals and seasonal activities.
Lauren McCormick summarizes a recent article by Mark Wilson that argues that the Ethiopian eunuch may have been a Jewish administrator.
“Bread baked according to an ancient Roman recipe was sold for the first time in 2,000 years at Pompeii.”
According to a new study, the stadium at Perga was repurposed into a gladiatorial and execution arena, and five “Gates of Death” were designed to release animals into the combat area.
A exhibition on Troy will open in June at the Colosseum in Rome.
Significant changes are being made at four temples in Luxor to improve the visitor experience.
Three 18th-dynasty tombs in Luxor are being reopened after conservation work.
A new theory proposes that 16 ramps were used to build the Great Pyramid of Khufu in a period of as little as 14 years.
Christopher Rollston is on The Book and the Spade talking about Dead Sea Scrolls research related to the current exhibit at the Museum of the Bible.
The Vanderbilt Divinity Library is soft launching the new Art in the Christian Tradition website.
HT: Agade, Explorator, Roger Schmidgall

