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FRIENDS OF ASOR WEBINARS

Holier than Thou? The Temples at Tel Moza and Reflections of Ritual Practices in Ancient Judah

Friends of ASOR present the first webinar of the 2025-2026 season on September 10, 2025, at 12:30 pm EDT, presented by Dr. Shua Kisilevitz. This webinar will be free and open to the public. Registration through Zoom (with a valid email address) is required. This webinar will be recorded and all registrants will be sent a recording link in the days following the webinar.

The recent discovery of not one, but a succession of two temples from the First Temple period at Tel Moza—just 7 km from Jerusalem—has reignited debate about how religion took shape in ancient Judah and the wider region. The revelations at Tel Moza are especially intriguing when set against the backdrop of traditional scholarship, which was both heavily guided by biblical texts and paradigms and hampered by the rarity of confirmed temple remains in Judah.

3D Reconstruction: Roy Albag

3D reconstruction © Roy Albag. Reproduced with permission. This image is not included under the website’s general Creative Commons license and may not be reproduced or distributed without express permission of the copyright holder.

At Tel Moza, excavations revealed a cultic precinct containing a modest early shrine that was later replaced by a monumental “long-room” temple whose plan, scale, and decoration closely echo the Bible’s description of Solomon’s Temple. Indeed, the similarities between the temples at Tel Moza and Jerusalem, and the proximity between the two, sharpen questions of cultic centralization, reform, and practice, and they suggest that Jerusalem’s temple was neither the only one in Judah nor necessarily the “first.”

Because such temple evidence is so scarce in Judah, the Tel Moza finds are unusually revealing. They include altars, offering tables, standing stones, sacrificial remains, and cultic paraphernalia that were found in sealed, well-documented contexts that reflect continuous rebuilding and refurbishing of the temples. Altogether, these discoveries provide a rare glimpse into how worship was actually practiced and how traditions formed over centuries. In this lecture, Dr. Kisilevitz will trace the development of the two Tel Moza temples and the rituals practiced there, setting them alongside biblical descriptions and regional parallels. Through plans, objects, and visual reconstructions, she will show how the patterns at Tel Moza likely reflect broader traditions that shaped religious life in Jerusalem and across the southern Levant.

Shua Kisilevitz is Assistant Director of the Albright Institute and a research fellow at Tel Aviv University.
She received her B.A.and M.A. in Archaeology from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and her PhD from Tel Aviv University. She has participated in excavations across Israel and has directed excavations at 15 sites in the region of Jerusalem and Judea. Since 2012, she has spearheaded the research and publication of the Iron Age site at Tel Moza, and she is co-director of the Tel Moza Expedition Project. Dr. Kisilevitz specializes in the archaeology of religion and ritual of the southern Levant in the Iron Age.

SUPPORT THE WEBINAR PROGRAM!

Friends of ASOR is pleased to announce that the first webinars of the 2025-2026 season will once again be free and open to the public with a goal to raise $10,000 so that the entire webinar season will be free. Will you support this outreach effort with a tax-deductible contribution? All donors/sponsors with gifts of $100 or more will be recognized in subsequent webinars. Help ensure these webinars stay free and available to all by donating today!

Designate your gift for “Webinars” in the drop-down menu.

BROWSE THE NEWS ARCHIVE

  • Fieldwork Report: Anna Taibi
  • Fieldwork Report: Hannah Borotsik
  • AM25 Recordings Now Available on ASOR’s Online Library
  • FOA Webinar: Carl Walsh

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


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ASOR invites members to submit paper abstracts and
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Hannah Borotsik, a 2025 P. E. MacAllister Fellowsh
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#Archaeology #Greece #Athens


ASOR is accepting applications for two 2026 Study
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Join us for the next FOA webinar on Wednesday, Feb
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If you are in the greater Washington D.C. area, yo
If you are in the greater Washington D.C. area, you are welcome to join this special lecture by Dr. Ahmad Emrage at George Washington University on Tuesday, February 10 from 5:30–6:30 PM. Dr. Emrage, a member of the Libyan Department of Antiquities and an ASOR member, will be discussing the cultural heritage of Libya.


ASOR is supporting archaeological fieldwork for ou
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#Archaeology #Nubia #Kush #Sudan


Narrative accounts of genocidal violence appear mu
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ASOR is pleased to announce that recordings from t
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Don't forget to tune in TOMORROW at 12:30 pm ET fo
Don't forget to tune in TOMORROW at 12:30 pm ET for the next FOA webinar presented by Benyamin Storchan: "Unearthing an Imperially Glorious Byzantine Church near Bet Shemesh: From Fieldwork to Virtual Reality". If you haven't already signed up, click here to register for free: https://www.asor.org/news/2026/01/webinar-storchan


Registration is now open for the Friends of ASOR t
Registration is now open for the Friends of ASOR two-day Philadelphia Tour on April 16–17! Join us for exclusive, behind-the-scenes access at the Penn Museum, the Barnes Foundation, and the Philadelphia Art Museum, featuring expert-led tours, special lectures, and insights into archaeology, art, and conservation. Learn more and register here: https://www.asor.org/news/2026/01/tour-philadelphia-2026


The Levantine Ceramics Project (LCP) is partnering
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Join us for the next FOA webinar on Wednesday, Feb
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Call for papers: The William F. Albright Institute
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Eligibility:
• Ph.D. candidates (as of Spring 2026)
• Paper must be in English
• Must be an unpublished/not prepared for publication conference paper

Deadline: February 15, 2026
Winner announced: March 9, 2026
Apply via the Albright Fellowships Portal: https://aiar.org/fellowships


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