Category:Jesus Archaeology (subject)

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
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Jesus Archaeology (see Archaeology & Historical Jesus Studies)

A specimen is considered to be genuine when its authenticity is proved by:

  • (a) Historical records (attesting the history of the specimen)
  • (b) Scientific examination
  • (c) Consensus among the specialists

Unlike the socalled Relics of Jesus, ALL the following specimens meet these three criteria.

Jesus was born under the Emperor Augustus and died under the Emperor Tiberius

Jesus was a subject of Rome. At that time, the Land of Israel was a province of the Roman Empire.

From archaeology we know that Caesar Augustus was the Roman Emperor from 27 BCS to 14 CE, and his successor Tiberius was the Roman Emperor from 14 to 37 CE. Both are well known historical characters.

Roman Empire.png

Jesus was born under King Herod the Great

From archaeology we know that Herod the Great was the king of Judaea from 37 to his death in 4 BCE. On May 8, 2007, Prof Yehud Netzer of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem announced that he discovered Herod gravesite in the fortress Herodium fortress, in the precise location given by the Jewish historian Flavius Josephus.

Herodium.jpg

Jesus was a Jew and preached in the Temple of Jerusalem

From archaeology we know that the major religious institution in Israel at the time of Jesus was the Temple of Jerusalem. Here is a model of the Jerusalem Temple at the Israel Museum of Jerusalem.

Second Temple.jpg


The Temple was destroyed by the Romans is the year 70. The Emperor Titus built a Triumphal Arch in Rome to commemorate the event. In the interior of the arch the bas-reliefs with the triumphal procession are visible:

Arch Titus.jpg


Arch Titus Bassrelief 1.jpg


Although the Temple was entirely destroyed and never rebuilt, the basement and the Western and Southern retaining walls of the Temple are still visible in Jerusalem and there are plenty of remains, inscriptions, etc. from the Temple itself, such as:

(a) Temple warning inscription (from late 1st century BCE). It warns Gentiles (in Greek) to refrain from entering the Temple enclosure, on pain of death.

Temple Warning Inscription.jpg


(b) A stone with the Hebrew inscription “To the Trumpeting Place” found at the southern foot of the Temple.

Temple Trumpeting Place.jpg


(c) The Western Wall, which supported the Temple place:

Western Wall.jpg

Jesus lived in a very diverse Jewish environment

The Dead Sea Scrolls are the most important archaeological discovery from the time of Jesus. Although there is no reference to Jesus and his movement in the Dead Sea Scrolls, they provide a very accurate description of the many Jewish groups active at the time.

Qumran caves.jpg

Jesus lived in a Jewish land where there was also a strong non-Jewish presence

From archaeology we know there were also numerous Hellenistic towns with pagan temples in the land Israel, as you could find in Athens and the rest of the Roman Empire. Polytheism was the majority religion. Monotheism was a minority religion.

First century palestine.gif Galilee.gif

Jewish did not preach in major towns but in small Jewish villages

We have the ruins of several of the villages mentioned in the Gospels (here is Capernaum):

Capernaum.jpg


Jesus and his disciples went fishing in the lake of Galilee on boats like this:

Galilean Boat.jpg

Jesus was at odds with the High Priest of the time, Caiaphas

At the time of Jesus the Temple of Jerusalem was ruled by members of the House of Caiaphas.

From archaeology we know that this was an important and wealthy priestly family. Here is the ossuary of Yehosef bar Caiaphas, high priest from 18 to 36 CE, discovered in 1990, in a tomb located two miles south of Jerusalem.

Caiaphas Ossuary.jpg

Jesus was crucified under the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate

From archaeology we know that Pontius Pilate was the governor of Judea (26-36 CE). In 1961, an inscription was found in the Roman Theater at Caesarea Maritima, bearing his name and official title: “Pontius Pilatus… praefectus Iudaeae”

Pilate Inscription.jpg

From archaeology we know that at the time of Jesus, crucifixion was commonly practiced by the Romans as a form of capital punishment, and we know how it was practiced by the forensic examination of the bones of a crucified man, named Yehochanan.

Crucified Man.jpg

Conclusion

Although we do not have any archaeological remains that could be connected directly to Jesus, From archaeology we know a lot about the world in which Jesus lived.