Newly Found Burial Catacombs and Inscriptions from the Necropolis at Beth Sheʿarim

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Research notes

AC/18/12/2025/not checked

Reference type
Author(s)
Erlich, Adi
Price, Jonathan
Year
2024
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Journal for the Study of Judaism In the Persian, Hellenistic and Roman Period
Volume
55
Issue / Series Volume
3
Abbreviated Series Name
JSJ
Pages
436-454
Work type
Language
Label
16/02/2026
Orion Center Library has physical copy
Abstract

Beth Sheʿarim in Lower Galilee was an important Jewish village in the Roman period, with an extensive necropolis containing lavish tombs that provided burial for Jews from across the Roman East. The necropolis is renowned for its many inscriptions in Greek, Aramaic, Hebrew, and more. Two catacombs previously unknown were discovered recently in the western part of the necropolis. Each contains a few halls shaped as corridors with arcosolium chambers along the walls. Each arcosolium accommodates 3–4 burial places. In one of the caves, two Greek inscriptions painted in red were found; one, written on a slab of stone, mentions a proselyte named Jacob, while the other, inscribed on the wall, mentions Judah, the owner of the tomb. This article deals with the catacombs and the inscriptions in the context of late Roman Palestine.