Under the Rug

Digs & Discoveries September/October 2015

(Courtesy Israel Antiquities Authority)
SHARE:
Trenches Jerusalem Mikvah
Mikveh found under living room, Israel(Courtesy Israel Antiquities Authority)

A family in Jerusalem has given new meaning to the idea that you never know what you’ll find when you move the sofa. The Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) has released details of the surprising discovery of a ritual bath, or mikveh, under a set of wooden doors covered by a rug in the living room of a home in the neighborhood of Ein Kerem. The large mikveh, which is reached by a stone staircase, was carved from bedrock and covered in plaster some 2,000 years ago, according to the dating of pottery and fragments of stone vessels found inside. According to IAA archaeologist Amit Re’em, archaeological remains are rare for this period in this neighborhood of Jerusalem, and the discovery of the mikveh will add new knowledge to scholars’ understanding of the city’s development in antiquity.

  • Features September/October 2015

    New York’s Original Seaport

    Traces of the city’s earliest beginnings as an economic and trading powerhouse lie just beneath the streets of South Street Seaport

    Read Article
    (Library of Congress)
  • Features September/October 2015

    Cultural Revival

    Excavations near a Yup’ik village in Alaska are helping its people reconnect with the epic stories and practices of their ancestors

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Charlotta Hillerdal, University of Aberdeen)
  • Letter from England September/October 2015

    Writing on the Church Wall

    Graffiti from the Middle Ages provides insight into personal expressions of faith in medieval England

    Read Article
  • Artifacts September/October 2015

    Corner Beam Cover

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Chinese Cultural Relics)