Three Illustrated Lectures
The Archaeology of Jerusalem, Professor Jodi Magness
Wednesdays at 6:00 pm
October 16: Biblical Jerusalem
November 13: Jerusalem in the Time of Herod
December 11: Roman Jerusalem
Admission: Free
Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion
One West 4th Street (between Broadway and Mercer Street)
New York City
Professor Jodi Magness is the Kenan Distinguished Professor for
Teaching Excellence in Early Judaism at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. A prolific author and popular speaker,
Dr. Magness has participated in 20 different excavations in Israel
and Greece. In 2003 she will co-direct excavations at the Roman
Fort at Yotvata, Israel.
In this series of three slide-illustrated lectures, Professor
Magness will review the history and archeology of Jerusalem in the
Biblical period, in the time of Herod the Great, and in the Roman
period.
Biblical Jerusalem
This slide-illustrated lecture will review the history and archaeology
of Jerusalem in the Old Testament period (Bronze Age and Iron Age),
focusing on the time when it was settled by the Israelites (beginning
with King David until the Babylonian destruction in 586 BCE). The
lecture will examine the Temple Mount, the City of David, and the
ancient water systems.
Jerusalem in the Time of Herod the Great
This slide-illustrated lecture will examine the monuments of the
first century BCE and first century CE - that is, from the time
of Herod the Great until the destruction of the city by the Romans
in 70 CE. The topics we cover include Herod's reconstruction of
the Temple Mount, his Antonia fortress, the city's fortification
system, and the richly decorated ancient houses in the modern Jewish
Quarter.
Roman Jerusalem (Aelia Capitolina)
After its destruction by the Romans in 70 CE, Jerusalem lay in ruins.
This slide-illustrated lecture focuses on Jerusalem as it looked
after its reconstruction by the Roman emperor Hadrian in about 135
CE. Many elements in the Old City today (such as the lines of streets)
can be traced back to Hadrian's refoundation.
For further information, please call (212) 824-2272 or e-mail
Kollel@huc.edu