UNEARTHING THE PAST SINCE 1900
  • BECOME A MEMBER
  • RENEW
  • GIVE NOW
  • SEARCH
  • ONLINE PORTAL
  • American Society of Overseas Research (ASOR)American Society of Overseas Research (ASOR)
  • About
    • WELCOME FROM ASOR OFFICERS
    • FACTS & FIGURES—ASOR
    • MISSION, BYLAWS, & STRATEGIC PLAN
    • HISTORY OF ASOR
    • COMMITTEES
    • POLICIES
    • FINANCIAL DOCUMENTS
    • ARCHIVES
    • AFFILIATED PROJECTS
    • AFFILIATED RESEARCH CENTERS
    • ASOR’s Honors and Awards
    • CONTACT US—ASOR
  • ASOR CHI
    • ABOUT CULTURAL HERITAGE INITIATIVES
    • UPDATES
    • TUTORIALS
    • WHO WE ARE
  • ANNUAL
    MEETING
    • REGISTRATION
    • HOTEL RESERVATIONS
    • ANNUAL MEETING SCHEDULES
    • SPONSOR & EXHIBIT
    • ASOR Online Library
    • HONORS & AWARDS
    • ANNUAL MEETING SCHOLARSHIPS
    • PAST & FUTURE ANNUAL MEETINGS
  • MEMBERSHIP
    & RESOURCES
    • INDIVIDUAL MEMBERSHIPS
    • INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERSHIPS
    • NEWS@ASOR
    • PAST ASOR NEWS, MONTH BY MONTH
    • ONLINE RESOURCES
    • PHOTO COLLECTION
    • EARLY CAREER MEMBER RESOURCES
  • FELLOWSHIPS
    & GRANTS
    • SCHOLARSHIPS FOR FIELDWORK PARTICIPATION
    • GRANTS FOR ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROJECTS
    • RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS FOR MEMBERS
    • MEMBERSHIP & ANNUAL MEETING SCHOLARSHIPS
    • ASOR-AFFILIATED RESEARCH CENTERS FELLOWSHIPS
    • OTHER FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMS
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • BOOK SERIES & MONOGRAPHS
    • BULLETIN OF ASOR
    • JOURNAL OF CUNEIFORM STUDIES
    • MAARAV
    • NEAR EASTERN ARCHAEOLOGY
    • THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST TODAY
    • LEVANTINE CERAMICS PROJECT
  • FRIENDS
    OF ASOR
    • Webinars
    • TOURS
    • THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST TODAY
    • ASOR ONLINE LIBRARY
  • DONATE
    • FY24 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS
    • LIFETIME HONOR ROLL OF DONORS
    • ASOR LEGACY CIRCLE
    • WAYS TO DONATE

 SHARE

 
 
 
 
 

NEWS@ASOR E-NEWSLETTER

ANCIENT NEAR EAST TODAY E-NEWSLETTER

PAST ASOR NEWS, MONTH BY MONTH

LIFETIME HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

FY20 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

ASOR VIRTUAL ANNUAL MEETING

ASOR Cordially Invites You to Its 125th Anniversary Celebration

Boston | November 22, 2025, at 7 p.m.

You’re invited to our 125th anniversary celebration at this year’s Annual Meeting in Boston!

We’ll be kicking off a festive ASOR evening (including dinner) at 7 p.m. on Saturday, November 22, 2025, at the Hilton Boston Park Plaza. Join us for an evening of great dining, entertainment, and ASOR-themed activities, as well as speakers who have been part of ASOR’s mission. Your presence will help make this milestone truly meaningful.

We hope everyone will attend. Tickets are $100. Thanks to generous donations, discounted tickets are available for $50 and $25 in the online store. Please write to info@asor.org for a discount code if you have financial need.

Register Now

When purchasing your ticket, please specify your dinner entree choice from beef, chicken, seafood, or vegetarian options.

Dress code: Cocktail attire/business casual, black-tie optional.

If you haven’t done so already, click here to register for the Annual Meeting and join our celebration in November. We look forward to seeing you at the celebration!

BROWSE THE NEWS ARCHIVE

  • Fieldwork Report: Gabbi Graber
  • Call for Virtual Archaeology Initiative Submissions
  • Table of Contents for BASOR 393 (May 2025)
  • Fieldwork Report: Dominique Langis-Barsetti

Latest Posts from @ASORResearch

asor_research

Initiating and supporting research of the history and cultures of the Near East and wider Mediterranean world.


Check out the May issue of Bulletin of ASOR 393, w
Check out the May issue of Bulletin of ASOR 393, with fascinating articles like Nabatean Tent Sites on the Ruhot Plain, Central Negev, and Nomadic Visibility; Olive Oil Production in the North-East Temple of Canaanite Lachish; Qaṭrāyīṯ and the Linguistic History of Ancient East Arabia, and much more. Read the Table of Contents by clicking the link (https://www.asor.org/news/2025/05/basor393-toc/) in our bio.


Friends of ASOR is pleased to share information on
Friends of ASOR is pleased to share information on BASONOVA & BAF lectures. On Tuesday, June 10 at 8pm ET via Zoom, Elizabeth Bloch-Smith (Princeton Theological Seminary) will present "Hearing the Voices of the Dead in Ancient Israel". The witch of Endor was consulted by Saul to summon the spirit of the prophet Samuel. This presentation examines the Zeitgeist and theology behind Isaiah 8, where the deceased Samuel speaks to King Saul (1 Samuel 28), and alongside considers tales of the talking dead from Mesopotamia, Hatti (Hittites) and Greece. Register here: https://basonova.org/next-lecture-reservation.html


Dominique Langis-Barsetti, a 2024 Katherine Barton
Dominique Langis-Barsetti, a 2024 Katherine Barton Platt Fieldwork Scholarship recipient, excavated with the Kerkenes Project in the central Anatolian plateau last spring. As an associate director on the project, Dominique encountered various situations that required her to overcome logistical and environmental challenges with quick thinking and creativity. Read her fieldwork report by clicking the link (https://www.asor.org/news/2025/05/fieldwork-report-langisbarsetti) in our bio.


ASOR invites members to submit poster proposals fo
ASOR invites members to submit poster proposals for the Poster Session as part of the 2025 ASOR Annual Meeting. Posters are an ideal format for presenting archaeological projects in general, a technical aspect of your project, or a spectacular find from the field season. Poster abstracts of 250 words may be submitted in the ASOR Abstract Center between now and August 1. Please read the Call for Posters (https://www.asor.org/am/2025/posters-2025) by clicking the link in our bio.


Once believed to be the location of Herod’s Augu
Once believed to be the location of Herod’s Augusteum, the cave at Paneas has yielded up some surprising discoveries following recent excavations. Read the newest ANE Today by Adi Erlich and Ron Lavi by clicking the link (https://anetoday.org/pan-grotto-paneas/) in our bio.


Join ASOR for this year's DC Day of Archaeology Fe
Join ASOR for this year's DC Day of Archaeology Festival, organized by @aitc_dc, on Saturday, June 28 at Tudor Place in Washington, DC. Stop by the event for music, food, and activities, and make sure to check out ASOR's table!


Christos Theodorou received a 2024 Meyers/Wright F
Christos Theodorou received a 2024 Meyers/Wright Fieldwork Scholarship to excavate at Kissonerga-Skalia, Cyprus. Read about his experience excavating a Bronze Age oven by clicking the link (https://buff.ly/CN3yM5h) in our bio.


Starting next Friday, May 30th, ASOR staff will be
Starting next Friday, May 30th, ASOR staff will be holding summer hours until Labor Day, September 1st. If you need to contact the office, please do so during normal business hours Monday–Thursday or before 12:30pm EDT on Fridays. We wish you all a productive and relaxing summer!


ASOR announces a general call for nominations and
ASOR announces a general call for nominations and applications for individuals to be considered for the position of Vice President. This is a three-year term of office beginning on January 1, 2026 and ending on December 31, 2028. Nominating an officer is an important way for members to participate in the governance of their organization, and we encourage you to self-nominate or nominate others. Review of applications and nominations will begin on August 15, 2025. Click the link in our bio for more details on the duties of the position and how to submit nominations.


ASOR's Early Career Scholars hosted Dr. Rennan Lem
ASOR's Early Career Scholars hosted Dr. Rennan Lemos (University of Cambridge) for their Spring 2025 Brown Bag lecture, "Archaeology Under Fire: The History of Sudan Between War and Water." Drawing on archival materials and recent fieldwork, this talk explores how Sudan’s archaeological heritage has been endangered—first by the flooding of Lower Nubia and now by war—and how a history of major threats has shaped the region’s heritage. Click the link in our bio to view the recording on YouTube!


Ofelia Tychon, a 2024 Katherine Barton Platt Field
Ofelia Tychon, a 2024 Katherine Barton Platt Fieldwork Scholarship Recipient, excavated with the Rural Landscapes of Iron Age Imperial Mesopotamia Project near Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan. Read about Ofelia’s exciting experience excavating in the Assyrian heartland by clicking the link in our bio.


Join the Classical Association of Scotland online
Join the Classical Association of Scotland online this summer to explore the world of ancient languages including Sumerian, Hurrian, Ugaritic, Hebrew, and more! Courses range in experience from beginner to advanced in both Latin and Greek. Registration closes May 28th! For more information, click the link in our bio.


Registration is now half full for the first Friend
Registration is now half full for the first Friends of ASOR tour in Chicago! Join us on September 18 and 19 for an exclusive behind-the-scenes experience. We will be kicking off our two-day jaunt with the grand opening of a special exhibit on Megiddo at the iconic Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures, followed by walking tours, and day two will be full of visits to the Greek, Roman, and Egyptian galleries at the impressive Art Institute of Chicago and the renowned Field Museum of Natural History, home to the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton. Registration and details can be found at the link in our bio!


When the Assyrian king Sennacherib was assassinate
When the Assyrian king Sennacherib was assassinated in 680 BC, it launched a civil war amongst his sons. How did Esarhaddon come out on top? And what were the consequences for the Assyrian kingdom? Read Christopher Jones's article in today's issue of Ancient Near East Today by clicking the link in our bio.


Don't forget to join us TODAY at 7:00pm ET for our
Don't forget to join us TODAY at 7:00pm ET for our last FOA Webinar, "The Queens of Nimrud’s Northwest Palace: Beauty, Power, and Presence in the Neo-Assyrian World, c. 865–705 BCE," presented by Dr. Amy Gansell. You can still register by clicking the link in our bio.
#FOAWebinars


Congratulations to the 2025 Project Grant and Rese
Congratulations to the 2025 Project Grant and Research Fellowship Awardees! This year’s awardees will conduct research and fieldwork in Iraq, Cyprus, Israel, Turkey, Jordan, Syria, and Libya. Click the link in bio to see a full list of the awardees. @dig_prehistory @reland.unipa @drsilviaamicone @kurdqaburstanproject @tellatchana


Our newest Annual of ASOR, Ethics in Archaeologica
Our newest Annual of ASOR, Ethics in Archaeological Practice from editors Sarah Costello and Sarah Lepinski, is now available for purchase at a discounted price for ASOR members. The volume raises contemporary ethical questions around race, gender, disability, climate change, and cultural heritage that are pressing and relevant to archaeology students and professionals worldwide. Learn more by clicking the link in our bio.


ASOR is pleased to announce 12 new field and publi
ASOR is pleased to announce 12 new field and publication projects have received ASOR affiliation since last summer. These projects cover sites in Italy, Iraq, Jordan, Turkey, Greece, Israel, and Cyprus. Learn more about these new ASOR-affiliated projects by clicking the link in our bio.


ASOR invites Roundtable Proposals for the 2025 Ann
ASOR invites Roundtable Proposals for the 2025 Annual Meeting. Roundtables are an ideal format for informal discussion on topics of general interest in the field, collaboration on publication projects or future member-organized sessions relevant to meeting attendees. Proposals of 250 words or less may be submitted by members and exhibitors attending the 2025 Annual Meeting in-person. Learn more and submit your roundtable proposal by clicking the link in our bio.


Join us for our LAST FOA Webinar of the season: "T
Join us for our LAST FOA Webinar of the season: "The Queens of Nimrud’s Northwest Palace: Beauty, Power, and Presence in the Neo-Assyrian World, c. 865–705 BCE," presented by Dr. Amy Gansell on Wednesday, May 14th at 7:00pm ET. Nearly three thousand years ago, at the ancient site of Nimrud, a succession of ten Neo-Assyrian kings reigned in collaboration with their queens from the magnificence of the Northwest Palace, the seat of the empire. Too often overshadowed by the well documented legacy of Neo-Assyrian kings, this presentation illuminates the queens who reigned with them. Register for the free lecture by clicking the link in our bio.
#FOAWebinars



Instagram

Stay updated with the latest insights, photos, and news by following us on Instagram!

Follow Us on Instagram

American Society of Overseas Research
The James F. Strange Center
209 Commerce Street
Alexandria, VA 22314

E-mail: info@asor.org

© 2025 ASOR
All rights reserved.
Images licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Contact Us
Membership
Give
Friends of ASOR
ASOR Cultural Heritage Initiatives
Terms of Use
News

Please follow & like us :)
Facebook
YouTube
LinkedIn