Feature • June 3, 2018
Feature • June 27, 2023
A study into the debate about the earliest biblical chronogenealogies, found in Genesis 5 and 11—for which early textual variants (Masoretic, Septuagint, Samaritan) differ dramatically. Can we know which is correct?
Article • December 24, 2020
The book of Jeremiah contains a remarkable description of what appears to be Christmas trees. How could this be possible—centuries before the birth of Christianity?
Article • March 20, 2019
Proof of the biblical kings abounds. What, if anything, about the prophets?
Article • May 25, 2017
“Governor of the city” discovered in Jerusalem Old City excavation.
Article • July 8, 2020
So claimed Spartan King Areus I. Could it be true?
Article • January 19, 2021
Archaeologists have found King Sennacherib’s 2,700-year-old siege ramp—built from a Canaanite city wall 1,000 years older
Article • May 16, 2020
The archaeological evidence for the battles of the judges
Article • February 11, 2020
Monumental ninth-century b.c.e. construction of an agricultural distribution center
Article • February 17
The Bible says that Nebuchadnezzar II was driven to act like an animal, but he still retained his throne. What does archaeology and classical history say?
Feature • November 14, 2022
Is there a man behind the myth?
Article • February 1, 2024
Feature • September 12
Strongman of legend—and actual history?
Feature • January 1, 2023
A look at the Abrahamic-era construction around the Gihon Spring
Article • December 8
The archive has often been linked with the Israelite conquest, yet there’s no mention of the chief protagonist, Joshua. Or is there?
Article • July 21, 2020
Archaeologists have uncovered an ancient winery connected to Naboth’s vineyard.
Article • April 10, 2022
An oft overlooked Egyptian historical testimony is a convoluted tale rife with propaganda and anti-Semitism—but it’s also an admission of the Exodus account.
Feature • July 22, 2019
How archaeological discoveries from Judah’s ‘watchtower’ city correspond with biblical history
Article • October 20
An Egyptian history far younger than chronologists said? Here’s the decades-old dating battle you probably haven’t heard of, over Egypt’s earliest history.
Feature • January 1, 2022
This exciting field of scientific study has bright days ahead, but only if we get back to using biblical history.
Article • March 11, 2023
Evidence of the core historicity of the Exodus—as related by non-Jewish authors of classical antiquity
Article • August 20, 2021
What the Prophet Ezekiel—and archaeology—reveals about ancient Babylonian divination
Article • September 4, 2022
Armstrong International Cultural Foundation Chairman Gerald Flurry speaks at the June 10, 2018 opening of the archaeological exhibit, “Seals of Isaiah and King Hezekiah Discovered!” from Armstrong Auditorium in Edmond, Oklahoma.