Jerusalem has been the focus of extensive archaeological research, yet its architectural history remains a puzzle with many pieces missing, spanning different historical levels. Since 1838, numerous investigations have been conducted, with significant discoveries made by Kathleen Kenyon, Benjamin Mazar, Nahman Avigad, and Yigal Shiloh. Their preliminary reports laid the groundwork for an overall understanding of the city's pre-Hellenistic history, which gained almost canonical status in the 1970s and 1980s. However, recent excavation reports, still incomplete, reveal findings that challenge this established narrative. New excavations are likely to further question the current understanding. As a result, both archaeological studies of the western Jordanian hill country and the re-evaluation of pottery chronology, alongside these new discoveries in Jerusalem, necessitate a revision of the conventional overall picture. This synthesis critically discusses current attempts and aims to present a new paradigm for understanding the city’s complex history.
Klaus Bieberstein Knihy





Das Land der Bibel
Ein biblischer Reiseführer
Dieser besondere, biblisch-theologische Reiseführer führt zu den wichtigsten Orten des Ersten Testaments: Sinai, Hebron, Megiddo, Hazor, Jerusalem u. a. und folgt den Spuren Jesu nach Galiläa und Judäa wie Nazaret, Kafarnaum, Betlehem, Jericho u. a. Die Beiträge wurden zusammengestellt aus mehreren Ausgaben von „Welt und Umwelt der Bibel“ und beschreiben die Orte nicht nur, sondern sollen als geistliche Begleiter dienen für die Reise oder die Lektüre zuhause.