

38 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3000
admissions@bgc.bard.edu
18 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3023
gallery@bgc.bard.edu
BGC Gallery is currently closed.
38 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3000
admissions@bgc.bard.edu
18 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3023
gallery@bgc.bard.edu
BGC Gallery is currently closed.
Leon Levy Foundation Lectures in Jewish Material Culture
Zeev Weiss
Eleazar L. Sukenik Professor of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
February 26, 2019
6:00 – 7:30 pm
Join us this spring for the Leon Levy Foundation Lectures in Jewish Material Culture. Zeev Weiss will deliver three lectures in a series entitled “Jewish Material Culture: Old Theories and New Approaches, from Eleazar L. Sukenik to the Twenty-First Century.” Lecture 2, “Jewish Material Culture: Old Theories and New Horizons in Current Research,” will take place on Tuesday, February 26, at 6 pm.
The period following the destruction of the Second Temple, and especially the Bar-Kokhba revolt, was a watershed in the life of the Jewish people, unfolding a new era when borders shifted and were redefined owing to the new order of Roman authority, socio-economic behavior, and Graeco-Roman culture. This shift is clearly visible in various types of material culture, including the architecture of private dwellings and public edifices, small artifacts for domestic use, art, language, and burial customs. While archaeology sheds light on the daily life and cultural behavior of the Jewish population in Roman and late antique Palestine, the Jewish literary sources, despite their limitations, also provide a glimpse into the realia of antiquity, rendering their interdisciplinary study necessary and promising for a comprehensive understanding of this era.
Interest in the study of Jewish material culture began in the early twentieth century. Professor Eleazar L. Sukenik was the first scholar to highlight the importance of exploring and excavating the physical remains scattered throughout the Land of Israel, thereby laying the foundations for Jewish archaeology at the newly established Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Three lectures will be devoted to Jewish material culture. Through the presentation of archaeological finds Weiss will examine the various approaches, types of finds, and parameters used by scholars to outline and reconstruct Jewish life and cultural behavior in Roman and late antique Palestine. He will begin by focusing on Sukenik and his academic achievements in the field of archaeology, continue with a discussion of the developments in modern scholarship, and, finally, offer new perspectives for future research of Jewish material culture.
The second lecture is entitled “Jewish Material Culture: Old Theories and New Horizons in Current Research.” During the final decades of the twentieth century, archaeological research yielded abundant information on Jewish life in ancient Palestine. These finds contribute significantly to the fields in which Sukenik was engaged and continue to expand the scope of the cultural markers for Jewish ethnic and religious identity. Socio-cultural markers for Jewish presence have been found at many sites in both the private and public spheres and are evident not only in the major towns and cities of ancient Palestine—in the heart of the Jewish community and in rabbinic circles, where some of the literary works known today were composed—but also at remote sites and in marginal areas. The second lecture will present the major innovations in the study of Jewish material culture in current research and will explore the methodological approaches and common perceptions used in reconstructing Jewish life in Roman and late antique Palestine.
Lectures in this Series:
Tuesday, February 19
Lecture 1: Eleazar L. Sukenik: The Establishment of the Field of Jewish Archaeology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1926–1953
Tuesday, February 26
Lecture 2: Jewish Material Culture: Old Theories and New Horizons in Current Research
Tuesday, March 5
Lecture 3: Expanding the Limits: The Study of Jewish Material Culture in the Twenty-First Century
38 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3000
admissions@bgc.bard.edu
18 West 86th St.
New York, NY 10024
212.501.3023
gallery@bgc.bard.edu
BGC Gallery is currently closed.