"The Manchester Guardian says: "Sir Frederic Kenyon's latest book is a survey of the results of archaeological discoveries during the past hundred years as they affect the authenticity, interpretation, and text of the Bible. As such, it is of special interest for Biblical and theological students; but it covers such a wide field that it will be read with profit by students of the ancient Near East in general. As a book that was needed, it fills the gap admirably. Moreover, learned as it was bound to be, it has also the merit of being entrancingly readable. "Here the reader will find full and reliable information about peoples who have been little more than mere names: the Hittites, the Hurrians, the Habiru, the Mitanni, the Tarachites. The discoveries at Ugarit (Ras Shamra) receive more adequate treatment than in other books of the kind, and we are told more about the progress made in the study of the Hittites. Appended is a good map of the Near East excavation sites. It should be added that book covers the New Testament as well as the Old." With Thirty-one Half-tone Plates and a Map." (from front flap, Harper & Brothers Publishers, No. 4427) "The importance of archaeological research has grrown greatly, both in fact and in public esteem, in the course of the last generation. In times less acutely anxious than the present, reports of excavations have received a high journalistic status as 'news' and occasionally, as in the cases of the tomb of Tutankhamen and the Royal Cemetery of Ur, as front-page news. One particular department of this research is that which is concerned with Palestine and the adjoining countries, from which light may be thrown on the books composing out Bible. Such light has been thrown from time to time, and in increasing measure during the last fifty years. New manuscripts have been found, earlier in date than any previously known; monuments, inscriptions, and books have been discovered which ........." (from preface by F. G. K., February 1940)
Author(s): Frederic G. Kenyon
Publisher: George G. Harrap & Co. Ltd.
Year: 1940
Language: English
Pages: 310
Tags: The Holy Bible;The Bible;Christianity;Religion;Archaeology;
Preface ......Page 10
Contents ......Page 12
I. The Nature of Archaeological Evidence ......Page 16
II. Mesopotamia: (I) Assyria and Nineveh ......Page 36
III. Egypt ......Page 67
IV. The Hittites ......Page 92
V. Crete and Philistia ......Page 110
VI. Mesopotamia: (II) Sumer and Babylonia ......Page 121
Telloh (Lagash) ......Page 124
Nippur: The Sumerian Story of the Creation and the Deluge ......Page 126
Susa: The Laws of Hammurabi ......Page 135
Babylon ......Page 142
Kalah Shergat (Ashur) ......Page 144
Ur ......Page 146
Kish and Jemdet Nasr ......Page 160
Other Sites ......Page 162
VII. Syria and Adjoining Countries ......Page 171
Tell Halaf ......Page 172
Ras Shamra ......Page 174
Other Sites (Tell Atchana, Mari, etc.) ......Page 185
VIII. Palestine and Sinai ......Page 190
Jerusalem ......Page 196
Samaria ......Page 204
Jericho ......Page 209
Lachish ......Page 213
Bethshan, Megiddo, and other Sites ......Page 223
Sinai ......Page 226
IX. Papyri ......Page 229
The Codex Sinaiticus ......Page 260
The Apology of Aristides ......Page 264
The Sinaitic Syriac Palimpsest ......Page 265
The Diatessaron of Tatian ......Page 266
The Teaching of the Apostles and the Second Epistle of Clement ......Page 269
The Book of Enoch ......Page 274
The Gospel and Apocalypse of Peter ......Page 277
The Hebrew Original of Ecclesiasticus ......Page 281
Aquila and the Hexapla ......Page 284
The Freer Manuscripts ......Page 286
The Koridethi Gospels ......Page 287
The Odes of Solomon ......Page 290
XI. Archaeological Discovery and the Old Testament ......Page 291
XII. Archaeological Discovery and the New Testament ......Page 315
Index ......Page 339