Archaeology: Biblical Philistines Found!

philistine-cemetary
Philistine_captives_at_Medinet_HabuAn archaeological discovery this week unveiled some of the most notorious and feared people of the Bible: the Philistines.
Until recently, it seemed that the Philistines were a people that vanished without a trace. In the approximate geographic location of Ashkelon (southern Israel), weapons, tools, pottery, homes, a writing system, and more had been uncovered, but the Philistine civilization was missing just one important thing: the Philistines! Unlike other civilizations, the Philistines seemed to have no record of human remains. Where did they go? Alien abduction? Iron-Age rapture? Probably not…
Delilah, temptress of hair-cutting fame, and Goliath, soldier of gigantic proportions, were some of the notable Philistines in biblical history. Thanks to the work of archaeologists of the Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon, one of the four known city-states of the Philistines, we now have historic proof of these fierce enemies of Israel.

Click here to see 10 Archaeological Proofs of the Bible

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Photograph by Tsafrir Abayov for the Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon


It was just in 2013 that a team was able to find the Iron Age cemetery and in 2014 excavation of the burial ground began. As of July 2016, this cemetery finding led to the discovery of over 210 individuals where the Philistines were recorded to have lived. This finding has massive implications for biblical and archaeological scholarship.
“So much of what we know about the Philistines is told by their enemies, by the people who were fighting them or killing them,” says Daniel Master, Professor of Archaeology from Wheaton University and co-director of the excavation. “Now, for the first time at a site like Ashkelon, we’ll really be able to tell their story by the things they left behind for us.”
 Photograph by Tsafrir Abayov for the Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon

Photograph by Tsafrir Abayov for the Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon


Because no bodies had ever been found before this, historians assumed that the Philistines burned their dead as part of their burial rites. “Ninety-nine percent of the chapters and articles written about Philistine burial customs should be revised or ignored now that we have the first and only Philistine cemetery found just outside the city walls of Tel Ashkelon, one of the five primary cities of the Philistines,” said Lawrence E. Stager, dig co-director and Professor of Archaeology of Israel at Harvard University.
Maybe these archaeologists are on their way to finding Goliath’s tomb!


100 Proofs for the Bible: PowerPoint

The PowerPoint® presentation of 100 Proofs for the Bible allows users in churches, Bible studies, and Christian schools to examine 100 key archaeological finds that support the veracity of the Bible, shed light on the culture and customs, and help us understand the people of the Old and New Testaments. Printable worksheets are included. Slide may be printed as handouts.
Findings include:

  • King David’s Jerusalem (2 Samuel and 1 Chronicles)
  • House of David inscription (Dan inscription) first reference to King David found outside the Bible
  • Beersheba, the southern boundary of the Promised Land (1 Kings 4:25)
  • Damascua, city of Saul’s conversion (Acts 9:1-25)
  • The Erastus inscription (Romans 16:23) verifies Erastus’s existence as a public official in Corinth as the Bible says
  • “God Fearers” inscriptions, terms found in Acts 13 and Acts 17 to possibly describe non-Jews who were believers

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