Best Photos of the Day
Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) archaeologist Saar Ganor displays a 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing an inscription, found at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.
Best Photos of the Day
Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) archaeologist Saar Ganor displays a 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing an inscription, found at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.
Best Photos of the Day
Israeli students excavated at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021, where a 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing a rare inscription was found. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.
Best Photos of the Day
Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) archaeologist Saar Ganor displays pottery finds at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021, where a rare 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing an inscription was unearthed. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.
Best Photos of the Day
Professor at the Hebrew University Yosef Garfinkel displays a 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing an inscription, found at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.
Best Photos of the Day
Israeli students excavated at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021, where a 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing a rare inscription was found. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.
Best Photos of the Day
Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) archaeologist Saar Ganor displays pottery finds at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021, where a rare 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing an inscription was unearthed. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.
Best Photos of the Day
Israeli students excavated at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021, where a 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing a rare inscription was found. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.
Best Photos of the Day
Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) archaeologist Saar Ganor displays a 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing an inscription, found at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.
Best Photos of the Day
Israeli students excavated at the site of Khirbat er-Rai near the southern Israeli city of Kiryat Gat on July 12, 2021, where a 3,100-year-old pottery fragment bearing a rare inscription was found. The rare inscription is the first dating back to the time of the biblical Judges and relating to the Book of Judges to be unearthed in the excavations conducted by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Antiquities Authority and Macquarie University, Sydney. It dates from around 1,100 BCE, bearing the name "Jerubbaal" inscribed in Canaanite alphabetic script, written in ink on a pottery vessel and found inside a storage pit that was dug into the ground and lined with stones. MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP.