Showing posts with label Judean hills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Judean hills. Show all posts

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Archaeologists Discover 7,000-Year-Old Jerusalem Settlement - CBN NEWS CHARISMA NEWS

During a pre-construction survey prior to building a new road, Israel Antiquities Authority archaeologists excavated a 7,000-year-old settlement in a northern Jerusalem neighborhood.

Archaeologists Discover 7,000-Year-Old Jerusalem Settlement

Photo above: During a pre-construction survey prior to building a new road, Israel Antiquities Authority archaeologists excavated a 7,000-year-old settlement in a northern Jerusalem neighborhood. (Courtesy/CBN News)
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During a pre-construction survey prior to building a new road, Israel Antiquities Authority archaeologists excavated a 7,000-year-old settlement in a northern Jerusalem neighborhood.
IAA archaeologists say the rare find dates to the Chalcolithic period, or the fifth-century B.C., when people began using copper (chalcos in Greek), not just stones, to make tools (lithos in Greek).
The team uncovered two houses and a treasure trove of relics, including well-preserved floors, pottery, beads and tools.
"The Chalcolithic period is known in the Negev, the coastal plain, the Galilee and the Golan, but (it) is almost completely absent in the Judean Hills and Jerusalem," said Dr. Omri Barzilai, head of the IAA's prehistory branch. That makes the find in the predominantly Arab neighborhood of Shuafat even more unusual.
The few traces of settlements during this period have been extremely sparse, Barzilai said, so evidence of a thriving 7,000-year-old settlement in Jerusalem is indeed unique.
Excavation director Ronit Lupo explained the significance of some of the discoveries.
"Apart from the pottery, the fascinating flint finds attest to the livelihood of the local population in prehistoric times: small sickle blades for harvesting cereal crops, chisels and polished axes for building, borers and awls, and even a bead made of carnelian, indicating that jewelry was either made or imported," Lupo said.
"The grinding tools, mortars and pestles, like the basalt bowl, attest to technological skills as well as to the kinds of crafts practiced in the local community," she continued. "We also recovered a few bones of sheep (and) goat(s) and possibly cattle. These will be analyzed further in the Israel Antiquities Authority laboratories, permitting us to recreate the dietary habits of the people who lived here 7,000 years ago and enhancing our understanding of the settlement's economy."
Meanwhile, archaeologists from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem are excavating the remains of a 12,000-year-old village in the Jordan Valley.
The site, named NEG II and located near the middle of a stream flowing west to the Sea of Galilee, has yielded finds from the Old Stone Age (Paleolithic period) and the New Stone Age (Neolithic period), including flint and bone tools and human burial remains.
"It is not surprising that at the very end of the Natufian culture, at a suite of sites in the Jordan Valley, that we find a cultural entity that bridges the crossroads between late Paleolithic foragers and Neolithic farmers," said Hebrew University archaeologist Dr. Leore Grosman, who led the excavation.
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Thursday, October 15, 2015

In the Face of Terror, Plant a Seed of Redemption ✡ "The Land to Possess"

You shall possess the Land and you shall settle in it, for to you I have given the Land to possess it.

NUMBERS (33:53)

וְהוֹרַשְׁתֶּם אֶת הָאָרֶץ וִישַׁבְתֶּם בָּהּ כִּי לָכֶם נָתַתִּי אֶת הָאָרֶץ לָרֶשֶׁת אֹתָהּ

במדבר לג:נג


v'-ho-rash-tem a-retz vee-shav-tem ba kee la-khem na-ta-tee et ha-a-retz ha-re-shet o-ta

Today's Israel Inspiration

Today's verse inspires us during these dark days of terror in Israel. Our verse is the biblical commandment for the Jewish people to "possess the Land and settle in it." Despite the constant attacks, these words are the source of our dedication to remain in this Land and assert the rights of the Jewish people given by the Bible. When our enemies seek to destroy, we plant the seeds of redemption. Uphold these words by planting a tree in the Land of Israel.

The Dream Starts Here
in Israel

Warning: You may find yourself booking a ticket to Israel after watching this video. From young to old, Jews are fulfilling a dream thousands of years in the making, and uprooting themselves from amidst the nations, to return to the true home of the Jewish people.

Israelis Prepare for Self-Defense Against Terror Attacks

The recent spate of Palestinian terrorist attacks has resulted in a surge in the number of daily calls made by worried Israelis to police emergency hotlines, as well as a huge increase in the purchase of self-defense products, mainly pepper spray, and self-defense courses.

"Israel Inside" DVD

"Israel Inside: How a Small Nation Makes a Big Difference" is a new documentary that explores the positive characteristics of Israeli society from a humanistic, psychological, and emotional perspective. This insightful and uplifting documentary sidesteps the usual conversation of politics, conflict and violence, and tells the story of the Israeli people – whose resilience has propelled Israel to the forefront of world innovation and progress.

Today's Israel Photo

Yehoshua Derovan's artistic photo of the Ella Valley in the Judean Hills near Beit Shemesh. The valley’s name comes from the terenbinth trees that grow in the region and are called "Ella" in Hebrew. This is the famous location of the battle of David and Goliath.

Thank You

Today's Scenes and Inspiration is sponsored by Steve Cech of Vancouver, Washington. Todah rabah!

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Rabbi Tuly Weisz
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Saturday, March 15, 2014

Mystery Picture Solution: Sha'ar HaGai (Hebrew) Bab al-Wad (Arabic) -- Almost Every Visitor to Jerusalem Passes this Spot

Israel's History - a Picture a Day (Beta)


Posted: 14 Mar 2014 
Original caption: "Entering the Judean Hills, Wady Ali, old route
Jaffa to Jerusalem."  (Keystone-Mast Collection, California Museum of Photography

at UCR ARTSblock, University of California, Riverside)


Several readers immediately recognized this location as the entrance way to the gorge between Israel's coastal plain and the Judean hills leading to Jerusalem.

Today, the location is called "Sha'ar HaGai" in Hebrew (Gate of the Valley). The name "Sha'ar HaGai" can be found in the Biblical book of Chronicles II (26:9) referring to the fortified towers and gates of Jerusalem built by King Uziyahu.

The Arabs referred to the site as "Bab al-Wad," (Gate of the Valley); the valley was called "Wadi Ali."



The Library of Congress archives dates this 
picture of the "entrance to the Judean Hills" as 1900
Throughout history, this natural gorge was the chokepoint for armies seeking to put Jerusalem under siege. In 1948-49, Arab armies laid siege to Jewish Jerusalem, and major battles took place from Latrun, near Sha'ar HaGai, all the way to the outskirts of Jerusalem.

"Bab al-Wadwas a popular and mournful song memorializing the convoys which attempted to break through the siege during Israel's war of independence.

According to blogger Daniel Ventura, the rocky path to Jerusalem was "paved" in the 1860s and formally dedicated for the visit of Austrian Kaiser Franz Josef in 1869.  The Turkish "Khan" -- wayside rest station (a precursor to a gas station) -- was built in 1873.  Reader Rose Feldman wrote, "Sha'ar HaGai was the way station where horses were changed on the way to Jerusalem at the beginning of the 20th century."
Ventura quotes a 19th century writer, Binyamin Ze'ev HaLevy Sapir, Jerusalem editor of The Lebanon newspaper, who reported in 1869, "The way from Jaffa to Jerusalem is almost well-finished, and two horse-drawn wagons come and go every day.  The trip from Jaffa to Jerusalem takes 10 hours, and horses are switched at Bab al-Wad."
The road today:

The highway today.  Ruins of the Turkish Khan can still be seen alongside the road. (Google Earth)

Friday, February 28, 2014

The Exodus Song (This Land Is Mine) by Pat Boone

Mountains of Israel

Western Wall celebration


All of it...and more to come.
Kids in Israel 
Judean hills 

Haifa - Mediterranean Sea coast

The Promised Land of the Jews. 
God gave them this Land.



Friday, January 10, 2014

'David's Castle' to be Unveiled on 'Palestinian' Land - Israel Today

'David's Castle' to be Unveiled on 'Palestinian' Land

Friday, January 10, 2014 |  Israel Today Staff  
We reported last year on the discovery of an ancient biblical-era palace probably dating back to the time of King David himself that was subsequently covered up for political reasons.
Now, the group that stumbled upon the unprecedented find tells Israel National News that they will publicly reveal the location of the buried palace next Friday, January 17, an event that is likely to cause a diplomatic earthquake.
Israel's Makor Rishon Hebrew daily reported last April that a major biblical archeology find in the Judean hills south of Jerusalem was apparently being covered up by the government.
At the time, a member of the Kfar Etzion Field School in the Eztion Bloc of Jewish communities had stumbled across an ancient ornate pillar as he descended into a cave in the Judean hills. The pillar and its attached capital clearly belonged to a royal structure, and local archaeologists said it certainly dated back to the times of the Judean kings, if not David himself.
The undisturbed nature of the find suggested that a large part of the ancient palace was probably buried intact beneath where the pillar was found.
"We appear to have a complete castle here," Kfar Etzion Field School Director Yaron Rosental told the newspaper. "Those who lived here after it did not know of its existence and thus, instead of using its stones to build a new building as was the usual practice, left it intact."
But, when Rosental contacted Israel's Antiquities Authority, he was harshly rebuffed and told to "keep [his] mouth shut" about the find.
The Antiquities Authority later confirmed to Makor Rishon that the find exists, and had actually been first discovered the year prior, but that political sensitivities had prevented archaeologists from exploring the site.
It was pointed out that the find is located in territory claimed by the Palestinian Authority. Uncovering a major and even unprecedented archaeological site that solidifies the ancient Jewish presence in and control of these lands could upset the peace process.
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