Lorenzo Nigro (born 1967) is an Italian archaeologist, novelist and watercolorist. He is Full Professor of Near Eastern Archaeology in the Faculty of Letters and Philosophy at Sapienza University of Rome. He directs three main archaeological expeditions: at Jericho in Palestine, with the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, at the Early Bronze Age (3rd millennium BC) fortified city, previously unknown, of Khirbet al-Batrawy in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, and at Motya, a Phoenician city in Western Sicily, while also acting as co-director of the Institut national du patrimoine-Sapienza University of Rome Expedition to Carthage in Tunisia. Since 2015 he started the archaeological exploration and protection activities, again in cooperation with the Palestinian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, in the Bronze and Iron Age necropolises of the Bethlehem urban area (including Khalet al-Jam'a, [1] Jebel Dhaher, and Bardhaa [2] ) and at the site of Tell esh-Sheikh Abu Zarad, ancient Tappuah. [3] In all these excavations he has been the protagonist of several important discoveries, from the reconstruction of the Bronze Age city at Jericho, to the Temple of the Kothon at Motya, to the entire unknown city of Batrawy with its magnificent fortifications and the Palace of the Copper Axes [4] (the axes are now on exhibit in the Jordan Archaeological Museum in the Amman Citadel), and the Broad Room temple. At Motya it has uncovered at least four temples and detailed a prehistoric stratigraphy at the foot of the acropolis showing that the island in Sicily was occupied and known to Mediterranean sailormen since the beginning of the 2nd millennium BC.
Lorenzo Nigro has written 26 monographs and more than 230 articles on the archaeology of the ancient Near East, Phoenicia and Mediterranean Mesopotamian and Egyptian archaeology and history of art, ranging from palatial and temple architecture, pottery chronology, Levantine and Iranian metallurgy, Sumerian and Akkadian art, Phoenician ceramics, settlement studies, history of excavations, etc.
His academic career took place mainly at Sapienza, with some initial experiences carried out in the Pontifical Universities. In fact, he taught archeology and biblical geography at the Pontifical Lateran University (1996-2000) and at the Pontifical Biblical Institute (2000-2006), while from 1998 to 2005 he was head of the Oriental Antiquities Department of the Vatican Museums, directing the Gregorian Egyptian Museum and curating the setting up of the last four rooms of the museum.
From 2000 to 2005 he was a researcher and then an associate professor of Archeology and History of Art of the Ancient Near East, again at Sapienza University, first in the Department of Ancient Sciences and then of Oriental Studies. Since 1 September 2021 he has been Full Professor of the same discipline in the Faculty of Letters and Philosophy of Sapienza. Furthermore, after having succeeded Antonia Ciasca in the chair of Phoenician-Punic Archaeology, he held it until 2020. He has revitalized the Class A scientific journal "Vicino Oriente" since 2000 and is a member of numerous editorial and scientific committees of national and international journals. international.
Since 2013 he has been Director of the Sapienza Museum of the Near East, Egypt and the Mediterranean, of which he oversaw the rearrangement in the new headquarters of the Rectorate Palace (rear side, Sala Piacentiniana), increasing the collections and organizing them, from the inauguration on 19 March 2015, a series of exhibitions and scientific events. In this enterprise Nigro, in addition to making use of the experience of the Vatican Museums, brought together the ideas developed during several stays in Philadelphia at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archeology and Anthropology (2015-2016).
He was the protagonist of important archaeological discoveries in the excavations that he has been directing for more than twenty years in Sicily, on the island of Mozia (2002-2023), in Palestine, in the ancient city of Jericho (Tell es-Sultan; 1997-2023), in Bethlehem, Tell Abu Zarad (ancient Tappuah, 2015-16), and in Jordan at Khirbet al-Batrawy (2005-2023), a very ancient city of the 3rd millennium BC. which he discovered in 2004, and at Jamaan and Khirbet al-Jamus (2017-2020), two Iron Age fortresses in the Zarqa region. Since 2019, together with Moez Achour and Mounir Fantar of the Institut National du Patrimonie of Tunisia, he has led the excavations of the Sapienza in Carthage on the Odéon Hill and at the necropolis of Dermech in the area of the Baths of Antoninus (2019-2023).
He has made a significant contribution to the reconstruction of the archeology and history of the Levant in the Bronze and Iron Ages through a great variety, quality and quantity of publications. His studies of Jericho (with the identification of the Canaanite name of the city "Ruha" in the 2nd millennium BC), and Bethlehem have contributed to a profound revision of the history and archeology of these important preclassic centers. His research on the Mediterranean, starting from Mozia, resulted in the great PRIN 2017 project "Peoples of the Middle Sea" conducted by coordinating 60 researchers to reconstruct innovation, integration and change in the formation of Mediterranean cultures between the second and first millennium B.C.
In Motya he identified several archaic structures: the prehistoric layers of the 2nd millennium BC, the Fondaco which was the first Phoenician settlement on the island, which he dated to the beginning of the 8th century BC, the Circular Tèmenos with the Temple of Baal and Astarte, the Western Fortress, the House of the Domestic Sacellum, the House of Triton's Horn, and resumed the excavations of the so-called Temple of Cappiddazzu (probably dedicated to the Phoenician god Melqart/Herakles); he has also excavated the Tofet, the sanctuary for incinerated children (carrying out important analyzes of ancient DNA) and, extensively resuming the exploration of the walls, to which he has dedicated two fundamental studies (Nigro 2019 and 2020). In Tower 6 of the walls of Mozia he discovered the funerary stele of an important figure, Abdi-Melqart, while at the Temple of Astarte of Kothon he found an ancient lithic anchor from the 2nd millennium BC, much older than the Phoenician settlement, as well to three votive deposits of objects that belonged to the temple, including the Protome of Astarte.
In Jordan, the identification in 2004 and the subsequent exploration of the ancient city of Khirbet al-Batrawy led to the discovery of the "Palace of the Copper Axes" in which important finds from the third millennium were preserved in a layer of destruction BC, among which five copper axes (today exhibited in the National Archaeological Museum of the Citadel of Amman) a necklace with 630 pearls and various potter's wheels, as well as various Egyptian finds (a lotus vase, a slate palette, a fragmentary serekh and a pearl of amazonite), which have made it possible to recognize the commercial relations of Batrawy at the time of the Pharaohs of the IV-VI Dynasty.
In 2015-2016 he directed the project of the Italian Cooperation "JOAP=Jericho Oasis Archaeological Park" for the protection and enhancement of 13 archaeological sites in the Jericho Oasis. Since 2022 it has undertaken a new intervention for the enhancement of the Tell es-Sultan site, again supported by AICS and Unesco together with the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities of Palestine, which aims at the recognition of the site in the World Heritage List of the Unesco.
His passion and field experiences are reflected in the two archaeological novels: Jericho. The Revolution of prehistory and I genî di Mozia, dedicated respectively to the Neolithic Age in the oldest city in the world and to the saga of Giuseppe Whitaker's family and to the mystery of Garibaldi's treasure.
Since 2009, in his capacity as director of the archaeological mission in Mozia della Sapienza he has joined the Scientific Council of the Giuseppe Whitaker Foundation, Palermo, for which he has edited the edition of several volumes and therefore has known the reality of the Villa Malfitano in Palermo, a unique monument which he also worked on.
Since 2017 he has been interested in the reproduction of ancient sculpture works through laser scanning and photogrammetry, creating several replicas of the extraordinary statue of the so-called Young Man of Mozia and of the statue of the Baal of Mozia (now kept in the Antonino Salinas Regional Archaeological Museum in Palermo). In 2022 he made a replica in organic material of the mummy of Pharaoh Ramses II in the Sapienza Museum of the Near East, Egypt and the Mediterranean.
Jericho is a city in the West Bank, Palestine; it is the administrative seat of the Jericho Governorate of Palestine. Jericho is located in the Jordan Valley, with the Jordan River to the east and Jerusalem to the west. In 2017, it had a population of 20,907.
Eridu was a Sumerian city located at Tell Abu Shahrain, also Abu Shahrein or Tell Abu Shahrayn, an archaeological site in southern Mesopotamia. It is located in Dhi Qar Governorate, Iraq near the modern city of Basra. Eridu is traditionally believed to be the earliest city in southern Mesopotamia based on the Sumerian King List. Located 12 kilometers southwest of the ancient site of Ur, Eridu was the southernmost of a conglomeration of Sumerian cities that grew around temples, almost in sight of one another. The city gods of Eridu were Enki and his consort Damkina. Enki, later known as Ea, was considered to have founded the city. His temple was called E-Abzu, as Enki was believed to live in Abzu, an aquifer from which all life was believed to stem. According to Sumerian temple hymns another name for the temple of Ea/Enki was called Esira (Esirra).
"... The temple is constructed with gold and lapis lazuli, Its foundation on the nether-sea (apsu) is filled in. By the river of Sippar (Euphrates) it stands. O Apsu pure place of propriety, Esira, may thy king stand within thee. ..."
Lachish was an ancient Canaanite and Israelite city in the Shephelah region of Israel, on the south bank of the Lakhish River, mentioned several times in the Hebrew Bible. The current tell (ruin) by that name, known as Tel Lachish or Tell ed-Duweir, has been identified with the biblical Lachish. Today, it is an Israeli national park operated and maintained by the Israel Nature and Parks Authority. It lies near the present-day Moshav of Lakhish.
Byblos, also known as Jebeil, Jbeil or Jubayl, is an ancient city in the Keserwan-Jbeil Governorate of Lebanon. The area is believed to have been first settled between 8800 and 7000 BC and continuously inhabited since 5000 BC. During its history, Byblos was part of numerous cultures including Egyptian, Phoenician, Assyrian, Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, Genoese, Mamluk and Ottoman. Urbanisation is thought to have begun during the third millennium BC and it developed into a city making it one of the oldest cities in the world. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Proto-Canaanite is the name given to the
Motya was an ancient and powerful city on San Pantaleo Island off the west coast of Sicily, in the Stagnone Lagoon between Drepanum and Lilybaeum. It is within the present-day commune of Marsala, Italy.
Hisham's Palace, also known as Khirbat al-Mafjar, is an important early Islamic archaeological site in the Palestinian city of Jericho, in the West Bank. Built by the Umayyad dynasty in the first half of the 8th century, it is one of the so-called Umayyad desert castles. It is located 3 km north of Jericho's city center, in an area governed by the Palestinian National Authority (PNA).
Mount of Temptation, in Palestinian Arabic Jebel Quruntul, is a mountain over the city of Jericho in the West Bank, in the State of Palestine; Historically the site of an ancient Hasmonean fortress, ancient Christian tradition identifies it as the location of the temptation of Jesus described in the New Testament Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, in which it is said that, from "a high place", the Devil offered Jesus rule over all the kingdoms of the world.
The Department of the Middle East, numbering some 330,000 works, forms a significant part of the collections of the British Museum, and the world's largest collection of Mesopotamian antiquities outside Iraq. The collections represent the civilisations of the ancient Near East and its adjacent areas.
Levantine archaeology is the archaeological study of the Levant. It is also known as Syro-Palestinian archaeology or Palestinian archaeology. Besides its importance to the discipline of Biblical archaeology, the Levant is highly important when forming an understanding of the history of the earliest peoples of the Stone Age.
The ancient Near East was the home of early civilizations within a region roughly corresponding to the modern Middle East: Mesopotamia, ancient Egypt, ancient Persia, Anatolia and the Armenian highlands, the Levant and the Arabian Peninsula. The ancient Near East is studied in the fields of ancient Near East studies, Near Eastern archaeology, and ancient history.
Eshmunazar II was the Phoenician king of Sidon. He was the grandson of Eshmunazar I, and a vassal king of the Persian Achaemenid Empire. Eshmunazar II succeeded his father Tabnit I who ruled for a short time and died before the birth of his son. Tabnit I was succeeded by his sister-wife Amoashtart who ruled alone until Eshmunazar II's birth, and then acted as his regent until the time he would have reached majority. Eshmunazar II died prematurely at the age of 14. He was succeeded by his cousin Bodashtart.
Tell es-Sultan, also known as Tel Jericho or Ancient Jericho, is an archaeological site and a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the State of Palestine, in the city of Jericho, consisting of the remains of the oldest fortified city in the world.
Amrit, the classical Marathus, was a Phoenician port located near present-day Tartus in Syria. Founded in the third millennium BC, Marat was the northernmost important city of ancient Phoenicia, with relations to nearby Arwad. During the 2nd century BC, Amrit was defeated and its site largely abandoned, leaving its ruins well preserved and without extensive remodeling by later generations.
Tell Sukas is a Late Bronze Age archaeological mound on the Eastern Mediterranean coast about 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) south of Jableh, Syria.
The MotyaCharioteer is a marble statue dating from the ancient Greek Classical Period. It was found in October 1979 in the ancient city of Motya, originally a Phoenician settlement which occupied the island of San Pantaleo off the coast of Sicily. It is owned by, and on view in, the Museo Giuseppe Whitaker on the same island.
Dimitri Constantine Baramki, often styled D. C. Baramki, was a Palestinian archaeologist who served as chief archaeologist at the Department of Antiquities of the Government of Mandatory Palestine from 1938 to 1948. From 1952 until his retirement, he was the curator of the Archaeological Museum at the American University of Beirut, Lebanon, where he served as a professor of archaeology.
Umm Al Amad, or Umm el 'Amed or al Auamid or el-Awamid, is an Hellenistic period archaeological site near the town of Naqoura in Lebanon. It was discovered by Europeans in the 1770s, and was excavated in 1861. It is one of the most excavated archaeological sites in the Phoenician heartland.
Khirbet es-Sar is an archaeological site in Jordan. It lies in the western suburb of modern Amman, on the edge of a plateau. In the MEGA Jordan database, which stores information about sites located in Jordan, Khirbet es-Sar can be found under numbers 11304 and 3007.
Tell Zurghul, also spelled Tell Surghul, is an archaeological site in Dhi Qar Governorate (Iraq). It lies on an ancient canal leading from Lagash of which is lies 10 km to the south-east. Its ancient name was the cuneiform read as Niĝin. The city god was Nanshe (Nanše), who had temples there (E-sirara) and at nearby Girsu. She was the daughter of Enki and sister of Ningirsu and Nisaba. Niĝin, along with the cities of Girsu and Lagash, was part of the State of Lagash in the later part of the 3rd Millennium BC.
A Canaanite kingdom centered around the city of the same name that was conquered by Joshua. The city itself was assigned to the tribe of Ephraim, while its lands were allotted to Manasseh. The location is probably modern Sheikh-Abu-Zarad, 8 miles (13 km) south of Shechem. Josh 12:17, 16:8, 17:8