Thursday, February 19, 2026

Onomastic politics and What did Second Temple-era Jews call the Land of Israel?

POLITICS AND HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY: Pro-Israel Legal Group Lobbies British Museum to Remove Word 'Palestine' From Displays. U.K. Lawyers for Israel told the museum that some maps and descriptions of exhibits 'retroactively apply the term "Palestine" to periods in which no such entity existed and risk obscuring the history of Israel and the Jewish people' (Ben Kroll, Haaretz).
The British Museum, the United Kingdom's most-visited attraction, has removed the word "Palestine" from some displays, after a pro-Israel group said it was used in a historically inaccurate way to describe areas in ancient Levant and Egypt.

U.K. Lawyers for Israel, an organization which says it "uses the law to counter attempts to undermine, attack and delegitimize Israel," said in a statement on Saturday that the museum is "reviewing and updating some gallery panels and labels" after determining that they were "in some circumstances no longer meaningful."

[...]

To read the full Haaretz article you need to subscribe or (for monthly access to a limited number of articles) register for free. Since I started writing this post, the Times of Israel (here), the Guardian (here), and many other media have also covered the story.

UKLFL has posted its own account:

British Museum Reviewing Palestine Terminology in Galleries after Audience Testing. The British Museum has confirmed that it is reviewing and updating some gallery panels and labels after “Audience testing has shown that the historic use of the term Palestine … is in some circumstances no longer meaningful.”

Not surprisingly, the move is not popular in some circles. This article is critical, but reviews the facts of the situation with the British Museum accurately as far as I can tell:

British Museum erases 'Palestine' label after pro-Israel complaint (Türkiye Today Newsroom).

I don't see anything particularly controversial about the reported changes in the British Museum displays, which mostly have to do with the Iron Age II and earlier.

The line taken by UKLFI, if I understand them correctly, is that where there is an emic term (i.e., one used by the ancient writers) for an ancient geographical region, that should be the preferred usage over any modern etic terms. That is a reasonable position as long as an ancient emic term is avialable.

In the case of the Land of Israel, for a long time the term "Palestine" has been used by scholars, often including Jewish scholars, as a neutral geographical term for the region in pre-Roman antiquity. See the PaleoJudaica posts, for example, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here.

It is a fair point, however, that political developments in the twentieth century to the present have given the term a political sense that makes it less than neutral. So traditional usage is coming up against the more recent political usage. It will be interesting to see how this debate develops. For an earlier post, see here.

And the debate raises a question for Second Temple Jewish studies which is worth exploring. Did Second Temple-era Jews have an emic term for the Land of Israel? I have poked around a little, not comprehensively, and found a few relevant passages.

    The Dead Sea Scrolls and related:
  • The Damascus Document (XII 19) and the Temple Scroll (11Q19 LVIII 4-5) refer to "the cities of Israel" in a geographical sense. The Temple Scroll is notionally set in the time of Moses, but is addressed to a contemporary (or eschatological-era) audience.
  • 4Q382 refers to "the [La]nd of Israel," paraphrasing 1 Kings 18:13, but the biblical text lacks a geographical term. The context is badly broken.
    The Gospel of Matthew:
  • in 2:20-21 an angel has Joseph take Mary and baby Jesus from Egypt to "the Land of Israel." Matthew is technically post-Second Temple, but before the Roman designation of the province "Syria-Palaestina."
    Josephus:
  • uses "the country of the Israelites" in a passage paraphrasing 1 Kings 11:23-24 (Antiquities 8.204), replacing the (national rather than geographic?) term "Israel" in the bibilical passage;
  • and he refers to "the country of the Jews," reportedly quoting a letter of King Demetrius to Jonathan in the mid-second century BCE (Antiquities 13:58).
  • Josephus does use the term "Palestine," but he seems to follow, and at least once quotes, Herodotus' usage restricting the area to the coastal plain, historical Philistia (e.g., Antiquities 1.136, 145; Against Apion 1.169).
    Philo of Alexandria:
  • in On Abraham 133, he says that the land of Canaan was "afterward (after Abraham's time) called Syria Palestine";
  • in Life of Moses I 163, he says that Moses proposed to lead the Israelites from Egypt to "Phoenicia and Coelesyria and Palestine" which then belonged to the Canaanites, with boundaries a three-day journey from Egypt;
  • in Every Good Man is Free 75, he refers to "Palestine Syria" as the place where "the very populous nation of the Jews," including the Essenes, lives.

    The Wisdom of Solomon:
  • addressing God, mentions "your holy land" in reference to the pagan peoples who inhabited the land before the Israelite conquest.
These are some raw data to ponder. I found them with the help of AI, but with a lot of effort to weed out hallucinations.

It's far from a complete listing, but it does show some range, which seems to have included "Israel," "the Land of Israel," "the country of the Jews," and perhaps "the country of the Israelites" and God's "holy land."

Josephus seems to follow Herodotus' more restricted usage of "Palestine."

Philo refers to "Syria-Palestine/Palestine-Syria" etc., but it's not clear to me what exactly he means. He may well be using "Palestine" in the same sense as Herodotus. I don't know if his terminology means anything different from the term for the Roman province "Syria Palaestina" in the second century CE.

Again, this is NOT a comprehensive listing. It's just illustrative. For example, I haven't looked at pre-Roman-era numismatic evidence or the evidence of the Bar Kokhba letters. Their usages, especially of "Israel, are likely relevant.

It would be nice to sort through all that and more sometime, but I do have other things to do. Meanwhile ... I'm pretty sure that the passages I did cite are correct, but I may well have missed other important references, so don't draw any comprehensive conclusions from my list.

If you find more Second Temple (or pre-Roman) references to the Land of Israel as a whole, do drop me a note.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

More on the newly-found ancient stone workshop in Jerusalem

ANCIENT MATERIAL CULTURE: Ancient Factory for Stone 'Jewish' Kitchenware Discovered in Jerusalem While Capturing Looters. Excavation in Jerusalem's Mount Scopus was noticed where none should be. Antiquities inspectors waited for nights and caught thieves red-handed (Ruth Schuster, Haaretz).

I noted this story already here. But this article includes a phone interview with Dr. Amir Ganor, head of the IAA Theft Prevention Unit, with more details.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Pitting public vs. private property in the Talmud

DR. RABBI JOSHUA KULP: A Pit in the Public Domain: How the Talmud Upends Biblical Law (TheTorah.com).
A person who digs or opens a pit into which an animal falls is liable for damages (Exodus 21:33–34). As a result of a hyper-literal reading of the term בַּעַל הַבּוֹר (baʿal ha-bor)—literally “the owner of the pit”—combined with abstract legal codification, the Talmud ends up suggesting that, in fact, a person who digs a pit on public property is actually exempt from paying damages.

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The Cairo Codex of the Prophets: digital edition

THE OTTC BLOG: Digital Edition of the Cairo Codex of the Prophets (Drew Longacre).

With newly-available, high-resolution photos of this important, lost manuscript.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Muraoka obituary

IN MEMORIAM: Takamitsu Muraoka, Japanese pioneer of Dead Sea Scrolls Hebrew studies, dies at 88. A prominent specialist in Semitic languages, Muraoka was proud to describe himself as the first Japanese student to complete a PhD at the Hebrew University (Rossella Tercatin, Times of Israel).
Japanese pioneer Hebraist Takamitsu Muraoka died last week in Leiden, the Netherlands, at age 88, after suffering a stroke a few weeks earlier and never fully recovering.

A specialist in Semitic languages and biblical Hebrew, Muraoka was proud to describe himself as the first Japanese student to complete a doctorate at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, according to Steven Fassberg, the Caspar Levias Professor of Ancient Semitic Languages at the Hebrew University’s Department of Hebrew Language, who knew Muraoka since the early 1990s.

[...]

The article is based on an interview with Professor Fassberg.

Background here.

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Caesarea aqueduct to be repaired

RESTORATION: Two years after collapse, Caesarea aqueduct to be restored in joint project. The Carmel Beach Regional Council, Caesarea Development Company, and Israel Antiquities Authority sign NIS 39 million joint agreement to preserve and develop the site (Rossella Tercatin, Times of Israel).
In August 2023, after the collapse of one of the arches, the IAA harshly criticized the bodies responsible for the beach for ignoring its repeated warnings about the aqueduct’s condition. At the time, the IAA urged the regional council and the Caesarea Development Company to urgently secure funds for renovation work and to stabilize the rest of the aqueduct.

In the current project, NIS 15 million from the IAA, the Carmel Beach Regional Council, and the Edmond de Rothschild Foundation will be invested in preserving the aqueduct through conservation works expected to take about 40 months. The project will include the conservation and constructive stabilization of each of the aqueduct’s 85 arches, and engineering treatment of the upper aqueduct (the water channel itself) under the scientific supervision of the IAA.

The Caesarea Development Company, a branch of the Edmond de Rothschild Foundation, will invest an additional NIS 24 million to develop the site and enhance the visitor experience, including landscaping, trail construction, and other facilities.

That's good news.

I noted the collapse of a Hadrianic aqueduct arch in 2023. A second Roman-era arch collapsed there in 2024. The article says (quoted above) that this project will conserve and stabilize all 85 of the aqueduct's arches.

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Psychology, Qoheleth, and Plato?

PSYCHOLOGY TODAY: The Ancient Cure for 'Is This Really It?' What Ecclesiastes and Plato agree about the mind (Chester H. Sunde, Psy.D.).

Well, that's something different. The threefold summary of Qoheleth's message is pretty good, as long as you accept the final colophon to be by the author. I tend to think it isn't, but I could be wrong. In any case, it does fit the book in its canonical form.

As for Plato, I am baffled as to why a specialist in "Platonic psychology" would publish such an article without a single citation of a Platonic dialogue. This contrasted with the many citations of Qoheleth.

I think one can make a fair Platonic case for something like Qoheleth's trajectory as Dr. Synde sees it:

The trajectory: Everything you chase will disappoint you — engage fully anyway — orient yourself toward something beyond yourself.
In the Apology (20E-23B), Socrates reports that the Oracle of Delphi declared that there was no one wiser than he. Baffled, he set out to test the claim by trying to find someone wiser. But he found the wisdom of the reputedly wise to be Qoheleth's hevel, vanity or emptiness. Socrates was wisest by default, because he knew he didn't know anything.

After that, he set his hand to interrogate everyone who had a reputation for being wise, in the hope of either finding one who was or showing them that they weren't.

He pursued this course with all his might. Not surprisingly, it made him exceedingly unpopular. But faced with the choice of abandoning his divine mission or being executed for it, he chose the mission and execution. The rest, as they say, is history.

Some such example would have been helpful in this rather interesting essay. That's the best I can do off the top of my head. You're welcome.

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Monday, February 16, 2026

Looting apprehension yields an ancient stone workshop

APPREHENDED: While capturing thieves: Ancient stone vessel production facility uncovered in Jerusalem. Large stone tool workshop from the Second Temple period, which produced tools for Jews some 2,000 years ago, uncovered in a cave on the eastern slopes of Mount Scopus in Jerusalem (Israel National News).
After capturing the suspects, Israel Antiquities Authority inspectors searched the cave. To their amazement, they discovered hundreds of unique stone vessel fragments.
That was lucky.

I have noted the discovery of stone vessel workshops in the Galilee here and one on the West Bank here.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

The Phoenicians at Nora

PHOENICIAN WATCH: This ancient city in Sardinia was home to pirates—and is an archaeology lover’s dream. Nora doesn’t have the name recognition—or crowds—of Pompeii. But the well-preserved coastal settlement offers travelers a rare glimpse into the lives of the pirates, Vandals, Romans, Phoenicians, and Carthaginians who once laid claim to it (Hannah Singleton, National Geographic).
Perched at the edge of a narrow peninsula in southern Sardinia, the ancient city of Nora is exposed to the elements. Wind, sun, salty air, and for centuries, even pirates. From every vantage point of the port city, residents and visitors can take in views of the Mediterranean Sea, which made Nora a thriving trade hub during the 8th century B.C. ...

What makes Nora special is what’s happening beneath your feet. Since it was unearthed in 1952, archaeologists have continued to excavate the site’s historic connections to Romans, Phoenicians, and Carthaginians. Some of the artifacts from the site (like an inscribed stone known as the Nora Stele) are on display at the National Archaeological Museum in Cagliari.

For a possible connection between the Phoenician Nora Stone Inscription and the biblical site (?) of Tarshish, see here. And there are other Phoenician remains at Nora.

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Carol and Eric Meyers

PROFILE: Duke professors found each other, then they found the world’s oldest Torah ark (Sarah Diaz, The Duke Chronicle).
Duke relationships are often formed from late-night study sessions or evenings out at a party. However, for Carol and Eric Meyers, two prominent Duke professors emerita in the field of biblical archaeology, love emerged less conventionally.

[...]

I remember that iconic Raiders send-up photo!

Both Meyerses have appeared often in PaleoJudaica. See the archive search engine.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Friday, February 13, 2026

Inscribed Judean seal found at northern site in Israel

NORTHWEST SEMITIC EPIGRAPHY WATCH: Stone seal from biblical Kingdom of Judea discovered during construction in northern Israel. The seal, which is made of a light brown gemstone, is thought by archaeologists to have been “hung like a necklace around its owner’s neck,” and decoratively divided into three (Miriam Sela-Eitam, Jerusalem Post).
Four pomegranates are carved into the upper section of the seal, while the other two sections contain an ancient Hebrew inscription reading: “Belonging to Makhach (son of) Amihai,” the IAA explained.
Not specified in this article, but mentioned in the Arkeonews coverage (which requires you to watch an ad to view), it seems that the carved pomegranates are "a symbol often associated with royal and cultic imagery in ancient Judah." Presumably, that is the reason for assigning this seal to the kingdom of Judah, rather than to the northern kingdom (of Israel) where it was discovered.

The site has also produced some other inscribed materials from the same period.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

A new Syriac (Arabic) world chronicle

SYRIAC WATCH (SORT OF): Previously Unknown Medieval Chronicle Discovered (Medievalists.net).
A newly discovered chronicle from the early eighth century is giving medieval historians a rare new window onto the political shocks and religious debates that reshaped the eastern Mediterranean in the decades before and after the rise of Islam.

Researchers at the Austrian Academy of Sciences (OeAW) have discovered and analysed the text in a manuscript held at St Catherine’s Monastery on Mount Sinai in Egypt. It was part of a collection of documents discovered at the monastery when a walled-up room was opened up in 1975. Known officially as Sinai Arabic 597, the manuscript dates from the 13th century and has significant water damage.

The chronicle within it dates from the year 712-13 CE, and covers the history of the world up to the year 693, making it one of the earliest surviving Christian sources to discuss the expansion of the Arab-Islamic empire. It narrates sweeping change across Late Antiquity and the early Islamic period, including the Arab–Byzantine wars and the shifting theological landscape of eastern Christianity.

[...]

Roger Pearse has more information, including a draft AI translation of the first part, and another human-produced draft translation in the comments to that post.

A new Syriac Chronicle! the Maronite Chronicle of 713; plus a collection of Jerusalem microfilms at the Library of Congress

Machine-translated portions of the new Maronite Chronicle of 713 in English

The media coverage of this story is confused and confusing in places. The information in the Medievalists article is correct, but incomplete. It has taken me some time to parse out fuller and correct information. As far as I can tell, it is as follows.

The manuscript dates to the thirteenth century. But it is a manuscript of a chronicle written in 712-13. It covers the history of the world from Adam to the early 690s CE. It was originally written in Syriac, but the Syriac original is lost. This sole manuscript of the chronicle is an Arabic translation of the Syriac.

Also, a word on the dates in the manuscript. The AI sometimes got confused about the dates in the machine translation. Sometimes it correctly gives the dates as "xxx Sel.," meaning that they are in the ancient Seleucid dating system, which continued in some use up into the Middle Ages. At other times it incorrectly gives the dates as "xxx CE" or even "xxx AH" (the Islamic system, whose year 1 is 622, the year of the Hijrah).

Almost all of the dates in the chronicle are actually according to the Seleucid system. To get the proper Common Era reckoning, subtract 312. That will be right within a year or so. The chronicle also occasionally gives a correct date according to "the Arab calendar," that is, the Islamic one. These dates are in the double digits. All the three- and four-digit dates are in the Seleucid reckoning.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

An evening in memory of Gabriel Barkay

THE TEMPLE MOUNT SIFTING PROJECT BLOG: “AND GRANT YOU PEACE” A NIGHT OF SCHOLARSHIP, SONG, AND MEMORY FOR DR. GABRIEL BARKAY.
This past Tuesday, February 10, 2026, the hall at Yad Ben-Zvi in Jerusalem was filled with friends, family, colleagues, and students who had gathered to mark the shloshim (30 days) of our teacher, co-founder, and friend, Dr. Gabriel Barkay (z”l). The event, titled “וְיָשֵׂם לְךָ שָׁלוֹם “ (And Grant You Peace), a fitting tribute to the man who discovered the oldest biblical text containing the Priestly Blessing, was a mosaic of a life dedicated to Jerusalem, blending deep academic insight with touching personal memories.

[...]

Background here and links.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Why is the Torah’s Law from God?

PROF. KONRAD SCHMID: Why the Torah’s Law Is from God (TheTorah.com).
Hammurabi’s Laws and other ancient Near Eastern legal collections were sanctioned by the gods, but crafted by kings. How and why did the laws in the Torah become God’s laws?

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Takamitsu Muraoka (1938-2026)

SAD NEWS: IN MEMORIAM: TAKAMITSU MURAOKA (1938-2026) (William A. Ross, Septuaginta &c.)

News of Professor Muraoka's passing has been coming out since yesterday. Jack Sasson has also circulated a memorial by Martin F. J. Baasten on the Agade list.

I never met Professor Muraoka, but his name has been prominent in the field for my entire career. He is well known for his prolific linguistic and philological work on the biblical languages and texts. PaleoJudaica has noted many of his comparatively recent publications over the years, two (here and here) in the last couple of months.

Requiescat in pace.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

More again on the redating of 4QDanielc

THE BIBLE AND INTERPRETATION:
Redating the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Book of Daniel

Recent advances in radiocarbon dating and AI-assisted handwriting analysis suggest that some Dead Sea Scrolls, most notably a Daniel manuscript (4Q114), may be closer in date to the book’s mid-second-century BCE composition than previously thought, reinforcing the mainstream scholarly view that Daniel emerged during the crisis under Antiochus IV Epiphanes. The article situates this finding within a long history of flexible interpretation, showing how Daniel’s apocalyptic imagery has been repeatedly re-read to address new historical crises, from Hellenistic and Roman times to modern politics where the text is still invoked to frame contemporary conflicts and leaders in apocalyptic terms.[1]

See also “Avoiding the Apocalypse in the Book of Daniel,” in Misusing Scripture: What are Evangelicals Doing with the Bible? (Routledge, 2023).

By Ian Young
Professor of Biblical Studies and Ancient Languages
Australian Catholic University

By Gareth Wearne
Associate Professor of Biblical Studies and the History and Archaeology of Ancient Israel
Australian Catholic University

By Evan Caddy
PhD Candidate
Australian Catholic University
February 2026

I have been following this story since it came out last June. For posts on this new AI redating of some Dead Sea Scrolls, along with new C-14 dating of some of the scrolls, the latter including 4QDanielc (4Q114), see the links collected here. Some of them have my own commentary on the redating and its implications for the date of the composition of the Book of Daniel.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Carchemish coins from the Great Revolt

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: “Render Unto Caesar” and the First Jewish Revolt. Coins at Carchemish provide window into first-century Judea (Lauren K. McCormick).
Two coins from the First Jewish Revolt (66–74 CE) have been found among the numismatic material excavated at Carchemish. Located on the Euphrates River in southeastern Anatolia, near the modern Turkish–Syrian border, Carchemish was a strategically important settlement occupied from the Bronze Age through late antiquity. The presence of these coins attests to tensions within the Jewish communities of the early Roman Empire over allegiance and authority—tensions the gospel tradition suggests were already taking shape a generation earlier, in Jesus’s time. ...
A third Judean coin was also found in the same coin assemblage. Read on ...

Cross-file under Numismatics.

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Kellens, Les Gâthâs attribuées à Zarathuštra (Paris: Les Belles Lettres)

BIBLIOGRAPHIA IRANICA: Gāthās of Zarathuštra.

Notice of a New Book: Kellens, Jean. 2026. Les Gâthâs attribuées à Zarathuštra. Aux origines de l’Avesta et de la religion zoroastrienne. Paris: Les Belles Lettres.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.

Phoenician scarab seal excavated in Sardinia

PHOENICIAN WATCH: Iron Age Phoenician Scarab Seal Discovered in a Remote Sardinian Settlement (Nisha Zahid, Greek Reporter).
Archaeologists excavating the Nuragic complex of Ruinas in Sardinia have identified an unusual find far from its cultural homeland: an ancient Phoenician scarab seal carved from steatite. The object was uncovered in the mountainous heart of Sardinia, a region better known for fortified Nuragic towers than for foreign luxury goods.

[...]

In the photos the object looks like it is fresh out of the ground. It is currently being conserved.
Once conservation is complete, specialists will study the finely cut hieroglyphic symbols in detail. The inscription may preserve a personal name, a religious phrase, or a marker of power.

Visit PaleoJudaica daily for the latest news on ancient Judaism and the biblical world.