The Myth of Nazareth: The Invented Town of Jesus (79 page)

BOOK: The Myth of Nazareth: The Invented Town of Jesus
3.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

[161]
  The localization of the settlement is considered in Chapter 3.

[162]
  See
Appendix 3
: “The Stratigraphy of Megiddo.”

[163]
  Italian title: Gli Scavi di Nazaret: dalle origini al secolo XII, 1967.

[164]
  This theory is taken up in the articles “Nazareth” in OEANE (1997); AEHL (2001),
etc
.

[165]
  Taylor 1993:262.

[166]
 
Exc
. 319. See also
Exc
. 17, 221, 254, 257.

[167]
  1969 edition pp. 27–34; 1992 edition pp. 43–65.

[168]
  Finegan 1969:28; 1992:44–45.

[169]
 
The localization of the settlement is considered in Chp. 3.

[170]
  Chp. 1:32–33 & 44.

[171]
  Bagatti 1960, col. 318.

[172]
 
Raisin sec
is French for the English “raisin.”

[173]
   Encyclopedia Judaica
, “Nazareth” (1972) col. 900.

[174]
  Chp. 1:34–35. Tomb 75 had no artefacts. The latest Iron Age pottery is not funereal, but comes from two silos and from the area around the Church of St. Joseph.

[175]
   Exc
. 254.

[176]
 
Exc
. 29 and 32.

[177]
  The article is signed “WHM.”

[178]
  Finegan 27.

[179]
  It is a resumé of Finegan’s section 35 (1969 edition).

[180]
  Kloner 1999:25–28. We shall discuss rolling stones in Chapter Four.

[181]
 
An alternate dating ends the era a generation later, with the accession of Herod the Great (37 BCE).

[182]
  Koester
History
:2.

[183]
  Koester
History
:9.

[184]
  The Tobiads were of priestly lineage (Schalit 96) yet originally were inveterate enemies of Jerusalem (Neh 2:10;
cf
. Isa 7:6). As early as Persian times the Tobiads insinuated themselves into high priestly affairs through marriage (the High Priest Eliashib,
c
. 450 BCE, was related to a Tobiad—Neh 13:4). They played a decisive role in the divisions leading up to the Maccabean Revolt and proved the biblical writer wrong: “but you [Tobiah and other foreigners] have no share or claim or historic right in Jerusalem” (Neh 2:20;
cf
. 6:1–14; 13:4–14).

[185]
 
Cf
. Josephus
Ant
. XII.168.

[186]
  Tcherikover reviews the career of the Tobiad Joseph at 131
ff
;
cf
. Koester I:210.

[187]
  Alt 385.

[188]
  Kuhnen:33. Schürer also notes the
poleis
of Hippus and Gadara East of the Jordan (I.1.196). It is possible that Beth-Shan also became a
polis
during Ptolemaic times.

[189]
  D. Graf, “Palestine,” in OEANE:225–26; Arav: 98, 99.

[190]
  Kuhnen:33.

[191]
  Arav 102.

[192]
 
Chancey 35–36.

[193]
  A subsection of “Galiläische Probleme,” in Alt’s
Kleine Shriften zur Geschichte des Volkes Israel
, vol 2.

[194]
 
Alt 1959:384.

[195]
  Barnavi 1992:34.

[196]
  Schalit:79–80.

[197]
  Freyne 1980:113–114.

[198]
  Kuhnen:34. Polybius (5.86) notes that the people of Coele-Syria (Palestine-Phoenicia) favored the Ptolemies over the Seleucids.
Cf
. Josephus
Apion
II.iv.5.

[199]
  Schürer I.i.207.

[200]
  Schiffman:101–02.

[201]
  Chancey:37.
Cf
. I Macc. 5:23.

[202]
 
Aviam, “Galilee,” NEAEHL, vol. II, 453.

[203]
 
Chancey:47.

[204]
 
Aviam:46.

[205]
 
Maps
: Kopp 1938:193, marked number “3”; DB Suppl. 6 (1960) cols. 319–20,  number “2”; Bagatti
Exc
:28, Fig 3 (unmarked, in quadrant D1).
Discussion
: Kopp 1938:192, 194; Bagatti
Exc
:242.
Notes
: The tomb is Bagatti’s number 72. The scale on the DB map is faulty (shortened by one-third). Richmond locates the tomb “about 250 m. south-west” of the Church of the Annunciation.

[206]
 
Exc
. 242. This is Kopp’s tomb no. 3 (Kopp 1938:192–94).

[207]
 
QDAP
Vol 1, No. 2, pp. 53–54.

[208]
  R. Rosenthal and R. Sivan: 85 (discussion), and 89 (bottom right), following P. Kahane.

[209]
  V. Sussman (1985:53) writes that these lamps made their first appearance in Palestine “after the reign of Herod [the Great].” A few years must be allowed for their dissemination to the Lower Galilee, hence, 25 CE is an approximate
terminus post quem
at Nazareth.

[210]
 
Rosenthal & Sivan: 85, 89.

[211]
  Rosenthal & Sivan: 85. It is a “Darom-type” bow-spouted lamp, as described in Sussman 1982:15–19.

[212]
 
Cf
. the following, all with small wick hole and stubby nozzle: (a) Sellers and Baramki fig. 41:63 & 74. This is their type VIII, which they date “4
th
or early 5
th
century A.D.” (b) Mazar,
Beth She‘arim
vol. III, pl. LXXI:32. He considers the lamp uncommon and its date uncertain, but notes a parallel “in a sixth-century context” (p. 190). (c) Mazar,
Beth She‘arim
vol. I, fig. 23:3 (III–IV CE).

[213]
 
For descriptions, photos, and sketches specifically of Hellenistic oil lamps see Sussman 6–7; Bailey 18; Goodenough I:140 (chart at vol. II #253), and Rosenthal & Sivan.

[214]
 
Chapter 2, pp. 65–70.

[215]
 

nach den beigegebenen Bildern der Funde muss man wohl mindestens bis auf 200 v. Chr. heraufgehen
.” Kopp 1938:194.

[216]
  English translation of
Die heiligen Stätten der Evangelien
(Regensburg, 1959).

[217]
  
Exc
. 242.

[218]
 
Revue Biblique
XL (1931) p. 556. See Chapter 2, pp. 65
ff..

[219]
  Also spelled
kok,
plural
kokim
.

[220]
  Kuhnen:73; Hachlili:790; Galling, “Nekropole,”
Palästina Jahrbuch
1936, p.76; Goodenough I:66.

[221]
  Finegan 1969:185.

[222]
  This will be detailed in Chp. 4. Later examples of kokhim tombs are at Beth She‘arim (III–IV CE) and Silet edh-Dhahr (to VII CE).
Cf
. Mazar; Sellers and Baramki.

[223]
  Mishna,
Baba Bathra
, 6.8;Babylonian Talmud,
Bava Bathra
100b–102b.

[224]
  Hachlili:789; Finegan:189,
etc
.

[225]
  Hachlili, “Burials,” ABD I:789.
Loculus
(pl.
loculi
) is another name often used interchangeably with
kokh
(Hachlili 789, Finegan 189). However, with some authors (
e.g
. Goodenough I/66, 88)
loculus
refers to what has been called the ‘shelf’ tomb (see Finegan/184). Because of its non-uniform use, the term
loculus
is avoided in this book.

Other books

In My Sister's Shadow by Tiana Laveen
Shine by Jetse de Vries (ed)
Virtue - a Fairy Tale by Amanda Hocking
Delusion by Peter Abrahams
Exodia by Debra Chapoton
Santa Sleuth by Kathi Daley
The Cured by Gould, Deirdre
Winter Storm by John Schettler
The Pretender by David Belbin