Peleg-Barkat, O., 2022, "The Facade of the Tel Arza Burial Cave: Architectural Style and a Comparative Study,” 'Atiqot 176: 177–186. (original) (raw)

Zissu B., 2007. A Burial Cave from the Second Temple Period at El-Maghar on the Southern Coastal Plain. Buletin of the Anglo Israel Archaeological Society 25. pp. 9-17.

At the beginning of 1946 a rock-cut burial cave was discovered in the course of quarrying for kurkar (hard, coarse sandstone), north of the village of El-Maghar, at the base of the northern slope of its hill (Israel grid, estimated map references 1298/1390). The cave was excavated on 2-3 May 1946 by Jacob Ory, then Antiquities Inspector of the British Mandate Department of Antiquities (henceforth MDA). A plan and sections of the cave were prepared and a brief report was submitted to the Department of Antiquities at that time. A full report on the excavation was to the best of our knowledge never published. This article, based on information preserved in the IAA archives, is intended to present the basic data on this cave, in the light of what is known of the Jewish presence in this area during the Roman and Byzantine periods.

Martin, M.A.S. and M.S. Cradic. 2022. Area K: Tomb 100. In: Finkelstein, I. and Martin, M.A.S., eds. Megiddo VI: The 2010–2014 Seasons (Monograph Series of the Institute of Archaeology of Tel Aviv University 41). Tel Aviv: 308-401.

Megiddo VI: The 2010-2014 Seasons, 2022

This report presents the stratigraphy, architecture, and assemblages of a masonry-constructed tomb, Tomb 100, which was excavated in Area K at Tel Megiddo. The tomb, which dates to the Middle Bronze III-Late Bronze I, contained multiple-successive inhumations of at least 23 individuals and an impressive assemblage of ceramic vessels, metal objects, scarabs, incised bone inlays, jewelry, stone vessels, and other small finds. The paper places the tomb within its intramural domestic context, analyzes its architecture, and discusses its complex mortuary practices in light of Bronze Age Levantine funerary traditions.

NEW STUDIES IN THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF JERUSALEM AND ITS REGION

NEW STUDIES IN THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF JERUSALEM AND ITS REGION, 2023

During the months of November–December 2022 a rescue excavation was conducted along the Jebel Mukabbr Road (also known as Bethlehem Road) under the direction of I. Zilberbod and A. Wiegmann in preparation for the widening of the road (Fig. 1).1 A total of seven burial caves dated to the Late Second Temple period (second century BCE–first century CE) were documented and their courtyards excavated. Amid the seven caves was a monumental burial cave that was unique in its architecture, so much so that it is among the largest burial caves found in the Jerusalem necropolis to be surrounded by four additional burial caves. It this group of five caves that form the subject of this paper.