Jeffrey P. Emanuel
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Jeffrey P. Emanuel.
Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions | 2016
Jeffrey P. Emanuel
Despite the late date and dubious veracity of the Deuteronomistic history, and despite the Bible’s status as the only Bronze or Iron Age text which indisputably refers to Dagon in a southern Canaanite geographical context, scholars have traditionally accepted 1 Samuel 5:1–8’s portrayal of Philistine cult in the Iron Age I as being centered on this deity and his temple at Ashdod. This study marshals archaeological and historical evidence to assess the level of support for the presence of Dagon in Iron I Philistia, and for a temple at Ashdod as described in the biblical account. Also considered, through comparison with the materially analogous situation in the Bronze Age Aegean, is the critical role that a textual complement to physical evidence (or, in the case of the Philistines, the lack thereof) plays in cultic analysis and pantheonic reconstruction.
Palestine Exploration Quarterly | 2016
Jeffrey P. Emanuel
Primary sources from the end of the Bronze Age have long been read as suggesting a time of chaotic transition, particularly with regard to threats from the sea that the established powers had no means of combatting. While the scale and severity of seaborne attacks seems to have increased in the late 13th century, these were not in themselves new phenomena, as a state of maritime threat seems to have been a constant for coastal polities and mariners in the Late Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean. However, a combination of internal and external factors in the late 13th and early 12th centuries combined to make these attacks more effective than they had been in the past, and polities more vulnerable to them. These included the rapid spread of improvements in maritime technology, particularly from the Aegean and the Levant, via high–intensity ‘zones of transference’, as well as an increase in the scale of ship–based combat operations, due in part to the displacement of people during the Late Bronze Age collapse. This paper addresses this in two parts, beginning with the ‘background’ evidence for a constant state of maritime threat in the centuries leading up to the end of the Bronze Age, and concluding with the ‘foreground’ evidence for zones of transference and the transmission of groundbreaking elements of naval technology in the years surrounding the Late Bronze–Early Iron Age transition.
Archive | 2018
Jeffrey P. Emanuel
Abstract The International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) is a set of common APIs developed to provide access to digital visual material from libraries, museums, and other repositories without the all-too-frequent need for a common viewing application. By using a common framework to collaborate across institutional silos, Harvard has leveraged the promise of IIIF in multiple functional areas, supporting the adoption of a new Harvard Library Viewer, walls of images in the Harvard Art Museums, and image collections embedded in Canvas and in massive open online courses from HarvardX—all in high resolution, and with unprecedented interactivity.
Archive | 2014
Justin Reich; Jeffrey P. Emanuel; Sergiy O Nesterko; Daniel T. Seaton; Tommy Mullaney; Jim Waldo; Isaac L. Chuang; Andrew Dean Ho
Online Learning | 2017
Jeffrey P. Emanuel; Anne Lamb
Aegean Studies | 2014
Jeffrey P. Emanuel
Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections | 2013
Jeffrey P. Emanuel
Donum Natalicium Digitaliter Confectum Gregorio Nagy Septuagenario a Discipulis Collegis Familiaribus Oblatum (eds. V. Bers, D. Elmer, D. Frame & L. Muellner) | 2012
Jeffrey P. Emanuel
American Schools of Oriental Research Annual Meeting | 2012
Jeffrey P. Emanuel
The Entangled Sea: The Mediterranean Sea in Ancient History and Prehistory | 2018
Jeffrey P. Emanuel