Footnotes

1.

The Seleucids were a dynasty of Hellenistic kings who ruled in Syria after the death of Alexander the Great.

2.

The name Hasmonean refers to an ancestor of Judah Maccabee; it later became a family title for the Maccabees.

4.

See Richard A. Batey, “Sepphoris—An Urban Portrait of Jesus,” BAR 18:03.

Endnotes

1.

Richard A. Batey, Jesus and the Forgotten City (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1991), p. 14.

2.

Howard Clark Kee, “Early Christianity in the Galilee: Reassessing the Evidence from the Gospels,” in The Galilee in Late Antiquity, ed. Lee Levine (New York: Jewish Theological Seminary of America, 1992), p. 15.

3.

Mishnah, Arakin 9.6.

4.

Carol L. Meyers, “Sepphoris and Lower Galilee: Earliest Times Through the Persian Period,” in Sepphoris in Galilee: Crosscurrents of Culture, ed. Rebecca Martin Nagy et al. (Raleigh: North Carolina Museum of Art, 1996), pp. 15–19.

5.

Michal Dayagi-Mendels, “Rhyton,” in Sepphoris in Galilee, p. 163.

6.

Matthew Stolper, “Vase Fragment,” in Sepphoris in Galilee, pp. 166–167.

7.

Joseph Naveh, “Jar Fragment with Inscription in Hebrew,” in Sepphoris in Galilee, p. 170.

8.

Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews 13.337–338.

9.

Josephus, The Jewish War 1.170; Antiquities 14.91.

10.

Josephus, Antiquities 14.414–415.

11.

Josephus, Antiquities 17.271; War 2.56.

12.

Josephus, Antiquities 17.289; War 2.68–69.

13.

Stuart S. Miller, “Hellenistic and Roman Sepphoris: The Historical Evidence,” in Sepphoris in Galilee, p. 22.

14.

Josephus, War 2.252.

15.

Josephus, Life 38.

16.

Josephus, War 2.574.

17.

Josephus, War 2.511.

18.

Josephus, War 2.511; Life 394.

19.

Josephus, War 3.31; Life 411.

20.

Josephus, War 3.32.

21.

Miller, “Hellenistic and Roman Sepphoris,” pp. 24–25; Tosefta, Yoma 1.4; Tosefta, Sotah 13.7; some manuscripts of Mishnah, Yoma 6.3.

22.

William Grantham, “A Zooarchaeological Model for the Study of Ethnic Complexity at Sepphoris” (Ph.D. diss., Northwestern Univ., 1996).

23.

Niddah 9.3.

24.

On second-century developments, see the essays in Sepphoris in Galilee, several of which address this topic. For detailed discussion of a monumental road and a reference to the agora, see C. Thomas McCollough and Douglas R. Edwards, “Transformation of Space: The Roman Road at Sepphoris,” in Archaeology and the Galilee, ed. Edwards and McCollough (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1997), pp. 135–142.

25.

Yaakov Meshorer, “Coins and Lead Weight,” in Sepphoris in Galilee, pp. 195–201; Eric C. Lapp, “Lamps,” in Sepphoris in Galilee, pp. 220–222, lamps 113, 114, 118.

26.

See Eric M. Meyers, et al., Sepphoris in Galilee, pp. 111–116.

27.

S.H. Cormack, “Figurine of Pan(?) or a Satyr” and “Figurine of Promethus,” in Sepphoris in Galilee, pp. 171–172; Dennis E. Groh, “Figurine of the Head and Forelegs of a Bull,” in Sepphoris in Galilee, p. 173.

28.

Lapp, “Lamps,” pp. 220–222, lamps 116 and 117.

29.

Epiphanius, Panarion 30.11.9–10; quoted in Isaiah Gafni, “Daily Life in Galilee and Sepphoris,” in Sepphoris in Galilee, pp. 51–57.