Steven Fine (“True Colors: Digital Reconstruction Restores Original Brilliance to the Arch of Titus”) is the Dean Pinkhos Churgin Professor of Jewish History at Yeshiva University and director of the Arch of Titus Project. A cultural historian of ancient Judaism, Fine’s The Menorah: From the Bible to Modern Israel (Harvard Univ. Press) appeared in 2016. His work is featured in Coursera’s free online course, “The Arch of Titus: Rome and the Menorah.”
Peter J. Schertz (“True Colors: Digital Reconstruction Restores Original Brilliance to the Arch of Titus”) is the Jack and Mary Ann Frable Curator of Ancient Art at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Codirector of the Arch of Titus Project, Schertz is a specialist in Roman sculpture and the urban fabric of ancient Rome and coeditor of Caligula 3D: Man, Myth, and Emperor (Brill, forthcoming). He is currently co-curating the exhibition The Horse in Ancient Greek Art to be held at the National Sporting Library & Museum and Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
President of the Institute for the Visualization of History, Donald H. Sanders (“True Colors: Digital Reconstruction Restores Original Brilliance to the Arch of Titus”) is an architect, architectural historian and archaeologist. A pioneer in the discipline of virtual heritage, his publications have covered such topics as alternative approaches to the study of architecture in archaeological contexts and the use of interactive computer graphics for research, education, publication, broadcast and museum display.
Marcela Zapata-Meza (“Excavating Mary Magdalene’s Hometown”) is a researcher with the Universidad Anáhuac México and the director of the Magdala Archaeological Project. She specializes in Biblical archaeology, Egyptology and religion.
Rosaura Sanz-Rincón (“Excavating Mary Magdalene’s Hometown”) is a researcher with the Universidad Anáhuac México and is associated with the Magdala Archaeological Project.
William G. Dever (“Whom Do You Believe—The Bible or Archaeology?”) is Professor Emeritus in Judaic Studies and Near Eastern Studies at the University of Arizona in Tucson. He has published extensively on the history of Israel in Biblical times.
Lawrence Mykytiuk (“Archaeology Confirms More Bible People”) is Associate Professor of Library Science and the History Librarian at Purdue University. He holds a Ph.D. in Hebrew and Semitic Studies and is the author of the book Identifying Biblical Persons in Northwest Semitic Inscriptions of 1200–539 B.C.E.
Steven Fine (“True Colors: Digital Reconstruction Restores Original Brilliance to the Arch of Titus”) is the Dean Pinkhos Churgin Professor of Jewish History at Yeshiva University and director of the Arch of Titus Project. A cultural historian of ancient Judaism, Fine’s The Menorah: From the Bible to Modern Israel (Harvard Univ. Press) appeared in 2016. His work is featured in Coursera’s free online course, “The Arch of Titus: Rome and the Menorah.” Peter J. Schertz (“True Colors: Digital Reconstruction Restores Original Brilliance to the Arch of Titus”) is the Jack and Mary Ann Frable Curator of Ancient Art at […]
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