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.

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

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.

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Tony Burke reviews The Carpenter’s Son

THE APOCRYPHICITY BLOG: Movie Review: The Carpenter’s Son (2025).
The Carpenter’s Son was banned in the Philippines for presenting Jesus as “rebellious, malicious, or seemingly under demonic influence” and for its “contemptuous” and “violent, sexual, or degrading” portrayals of religious imagery and figures. None of that seems fair. There is nothing particularly blasphemous about the film. It’s just not very good. But it is of interest for those of us who study apocryphal literature to see how a modern filmmaker uses the text and to see how the public reacts to it. ...
Tony Burke is an expert, perhaps the expert, on the Infancy Gospel of Thomas. So his reaction to the film is of particular interest.

PaleoJudaica posts on The Carpenter's Son (which I have not seen), with some of my own comments based mainly on the trailers, are here and links.

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

International Septuagint Day 2026 (belatedly, as usual)

WILLIAM A. ROSS: INTERNATIONAL SEPTUAGINT DAY 2026: A NEW SEPTUAGINT SEMINAR.

This was on 8 February. I'm late again, but this time so is he.

Follow the link for information on the new Oxford Seminar on the Septuagint.

Past PaleoJudaica notices of the day are here and links.

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

Online event: Dr. Susan Ackerman: Pregnancy & Childbirth Rituals in Ancient Israel

ON ZOOM: Virtual Seminar with Dr. Susan Ackerman: Pregnancy & Childbirth Rituals in Ancient Israel.
In conjunction with the Museum at Eldridge Street's current exhibition, First Light: Birth in the Jewish Tradition, join Professor Emerita of Religion at Dartmouth College, Susan Ackerman, on Zoom as we explore pregnancy and childbirth rituals in ancient Israel.

While there are not many passages in the Bible that shed light on pregnancy and childbirth rituals in ancient Israel, looking elsewhere in the ancient world, especially to the cultures of Hatti, Mesopotamia, and Egypt, can help us identify possible rituals that Israelite women may have used during pregnancy, labor, and delivery.

Join Dr. Ackerman on February 11th at 6pm Eastern Time as she traces the experience of the ancient world’s mothers-to-be from conception, through pregnancy, to delivery. She will also provide evidence regarding ancient Israelite mothers' ritual activities, such as consulting oracles, using protective amulets and anointing oil, knot-magic rituals, reciting incantations, and bathing newborns.

Follow the link for (free) registration information.

For Professor Ackerman's recent book on the subject of this seminar, see here.

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

Monday, February 09, 2026

Satlow, The Enchanted World (Princeton)

MICHAEL L. SATLOW: An Enchanted World: The Official Publication (and podcast links).
I am delighted to announce that my book, An Enchanted World: The Shared Religious Landscape in Late Antiquity, will be released in the United States on February 3. The U.K. release is March 31, and an Italian edition is in the works.

[...]

It is now out in both countries, published by Princeton University Press. The publisher link is here.

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

One of Vitruvius' buildings has been discovered

BIBLE HISTORY DAILY: Vitruvius and the Built World of the New Testament. First confirmed basilica of Vitruvius uncovered (Lauren K. McCormick).
While parts of the early Roman built world survive in exceptional sites such as Pompeii and Herculaneum, Roman architecture is unevenly preserved across the empire. Recent excavations at Piazza Andrea Costa in the Italian city of Fano (ancient Fanum Fortunae) provide an opportunity to recover the architecture of a mid-sized Italian city, one not subjected to the constant rebuilding that took place in the capital. Archaeologists believe they have identified the remains of a Roman basilica in Fanum Fortunae built by the late first-century BCE architect Vitruvius.
There's not a very direct connection between this discovery and the New Testament, but it's always good when new evidence improves our material feel for life in the ancient world.

As it happens, the Penguin translation of Vitrivuis' On Architecture has been sitting on my coffee table for some time, glaring at me to be read. I suppose that's the main reason the story caught my eye. Maybe I will get to it soon.

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

Baalbek

PHOENICIAN WATCH: Baalbek: A UNESCO World Heritage Site of Architectural Splendor (Subekti, Tempo).

A vivid photo essay on the ruins of this important Phoenician city in Lebanon. For some PaleoJudaica posts on Baalbek, see the links collected here.

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

Sunday, February 08, 2026

Siquans & Kowalski (eds.), The Reception of Exodus Motifs in Christian, Jewish, and Islamic Writings (Mohr Siebeck)

NEW BOOK FROM MOHR SIEBECK:
The Reception of Exodus Motifs in Christian, Jewish, and Islamic Writings
Edited by Agnethe Siquans and Beate Kowalski

2026. 256 pages.
History of Biblical Exegesis (HBE) 9

€89.00
including VAT

sewn paper
available
978-3-16-164303-3

Also Available As:
eBook PDF
€89.00

Summary

The Exodus story ranks among the most influential narratives of the biblical tradition. As Israel's foundational story of origin, it has shaped Jewish identity in profound ways, while also exerting major influence on Christianity and Islam. The contributors to this volume trace the diverse strategies by which interpretive communities have appropriated the Exodus for their own identity-formation, theological reflection, and social orientation. While received as a normative and authoritative text, the Exodus account has also posed significant challenges. Difficult passages - such as the hardening of Pharaoh's heart or the ambivalent portrayal of Moses - have demanded interpretive responses, ranging from neglect to creative re-interpretation, as exemplified by the Qur'anic representation of Moses' »white« hand. Beyond textual analysis, the contributors emphasize the cultural settings in which these readings emerged: rabbis and church fathers, Paul and early Muslim thinkers interacted, influenced each other, or sharply demarcated their positions. Thus, the reception history of Exodus not only illuminates theological debates but also offers insights into interreligious relations, processes of identity formation, and the dynamics of cultural boundary-drawing

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

Saturday, February 07, 2026

Dello Russo, A Jewish Archaeology (Brill)

NEW BOOK FROM BRILL:
A Jewish Archaeology

The Christian Discovery of Jewish Catacombs in Rome

Series: Jews, Judaism, and the Arts, Volume: 6

Author: Jessica Dello Russo

This study examines how various catacomb networks in Rome were eliminated and subsequently restored to the historical record as specifically Jewish sites. By exploring the evolution, interpretation and presentation of these catacombs from ancient times to the present, it offers fresh insights into their historical significance and the impact they have had on later generations. Understanding how this situation relates to the broader context of archaeological activity in Rome also highlights important changes in the study of catacombs during the nineteenth century that led to the identification of additional Jewish catacombs and other material evidence of Jews in Ancient Rome.

Copyright Year: 2026

E-Book (PDF)
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-73538-5
Publication: 22 Sep 2025
EUR €135.00

Hardback
Availability: Published
ISBN: 978-90-04-53291-5
Publication: 02 Oct 2025
EUR €135.00

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