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- King David’s Palace and the Millo - Biblical Archaeology Society
“The house of Millo” (“Beth-millo,” AT, JB, RS) may have been a fortress or citadel and was perhaps the same as “the tower of Shechem ” Apparently the men of “the house of Millo” shared in making Abimelech king The prophetic words of Gideon’s son Jotham pointed to disaster for “the house of Millo” at the hands of Abimelech
- Locating Jerusalem’s Millo - Biblical Archaeology Society
We learn a variety of key facts about the Millo from these sundry references: it was a significant, imposing, and apparently enclosed royal structure (2 Kings 12:20); it was located on the periphery of the City of David, and was associated with but somehow distinct from the city’s fortifications (2 Samuel 5:9; 1 Kings 11:27); it appears to
- Unearthing Jerusalem’s Millo - Biblical Archaeology Society
Although you can read more about this new theory in “The Millo: Jerusalem’s Lost Monument,” published in the Fall 2023 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review, we also caught up with two of the authors, Chris McKinny and Joe Uziel, in Jerusalem’s City of David to learn more
- King Joash and Jerusalem’s Beit Millo
The biblical description of Joash’s assassination includes an important historical detail—the precise location where it took place—but where exactly is the “House of Millo” (Beit Millo in Hebrew) A recent study published in the Journal of Biblical Literature proposes a new and intriguing solution A New Proposal for the Beit Millo
- millo Archives - Biblical Archaeology Society
In the study of Biblical archaeology, Biblical texts and archaeological finds must be examined critically and independently, but ultimately, they must be interpreted together Such an approach can be applied to King David’s Palace and the Millo
- Did I Find King Davids Palace? - Biblical Archaeology Society
Mazar was not the first to make important discoveries in this part of Jerusalem British archaeologist Dame Kathleen Kenyon, who excavated there in the 1960s, found a portion of a large structure that she thought was part of a casemate wall (two parallel walls divided by perpendicular walls) built by King Solomon in the tenth century B C E Mazar wondered whether Kenyon’s discovery was
- House of Millo Archives - Biblical Archaeology Society
King Joash and Jerusalem’s Beit Millo By: Nathan Steinmeyer As recounted in 2 Kings 11–12, King Joash reigned over Judah for 40 years, making him one of the southern kingdom’s longest-reigning monarchs
- What’s New in Biblical Jerusalem? - Biblical Archaeology Society
The Stepped Stone Structure is identified by some with the biblical Millo (2 Kings 12:20) and by others as a massive retaining wall Photo courtesy Nathan Steinmeyer, BAS In the early tenth century, the city was supposedly ruled by the biblical kings David and Solomon
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