News

In 1986, an ancient fishing boat was discovered at the bottom of the Sea of Galilee. While there's no proof it was actually ...
Archaeologists have discovered four bronze discs in a 1,900-year-old Roman grave in central Israel. The artifacts depict ...
In 1986 a 2,000 year old boat was discovered by two brothers in the Sea of Galilee, and has since been dubbed the 'Jesus Boat ...
New research suggests that a burial site once venerated by Christian pilgrims likely belonged to a member of Herod’s dynasty ...
Discovered near Kfar Saba, the ornate coffin fittings may hint at ties to pagan cults -- or a Roman soldier’s final journey ...
The bronze artifacts may have served as coffin handles for a burial in what is now Israel, but the true nature of the find ...
Ancient yeast has been coaxed back to life, and the result is a pint-sized portal to the past. Israeli archeologists and ...
The inscriptions, which were recently published in Liber Annuus, are composed of 30 inscriptions and nine drawings on the ...
The authority said 2,000 gold coins were discovered by chance off the northern coastal city when members of a diving club stumbled upon them and informed the Antiquities Authority's marine division.
Archaeologists in Israel have discovered an extremely rare, well-preserved Roman marble sarcophagus which depicts the gods Hercules and Dionysus in a drinking contest.
A joint team from the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) and the Caesarea Development Corporation found the sarcophagus buried beneath a sand dune outside the city’s ancient walls.