Publication
A Big Thank You!
12/04/11 16:37
Many may not know how important and vital sponsors
and supporters are in the archaeological business.
Though our universities, faculties and institutes
contribute a lot to Kinneret Regional Project, this
endeavor would not be possible without the generous
support we receive from various foundations,
institutions, societies and private donors. In recent
years we received considerable support from (in
alphabetical order):
Most recently, however, co-directors Jürgen Zangenberg and Stefan Münger have received a significant grant from the White-Levy Program for Archaeological Publications for their project «The Early Iron Age City on Tell el-‘Orēme / Tel Kinrot (Galilee)». The grant is awarded for the academic year 2011/12, but may be extended for another two years until 2014. The prestigious White-Levy Grant for Archaeological Publications is awarded annually to 9-12 projects worldwide to support “research on terminated and unpublished archaeological field work from significant sites in the Aegean, Anatolia, Balkans, Iranian Plateau, Levant, and Mesopotamia”. The generous subsidy will enable Stefan Münger and Jürgen Zangenberg and the involved authors to publish the final reports of the Early Iron Age strata of Tel Kinrot, excavated by Kinneret Regional Project until 2008.
We are honoured to receive this prestigious grant and grateful towards the «White-Levy Program» and all our other – equally important – supporters of our work on the Northwestern shores of the Sea of Galilee.
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Auswärtiges Amt der Bundesrepublik Deutschland

- Deutscher Palästina-Verein
- Deutscher Verein vom Heiligen Lande
- Leids Universiteits Fonds
- Finnish Cultural Foundation
- Finnish Institute of the Middle East
- Leiden University Funds (Byvanck Stichting)
- Netherlands School for Advanced Studies in Theology and Religion
- Romanian Cultural Institute
- Schröter Stiftung
- UniBern Research Foundation
Most recently, however, co-directors Jürgen Zangenberg and Stefan Münger have received a significant grant from the White-Levy Program for Archaeological Publications for their project «The Early Iron Age City on Tell el-‘Orēme / Tel Kinrot (Galilee)». The grant is awarded for the academic year 2011/12, but may be extended for another two years until 2014. The prestigious White-Levy Grant for Archaeological Publications is awarded annually to 9-12 projects worldwide to support “research on terminated and unpublished archaeological field work from significant sites in the Aegean, Anatolia, Balkans, Iranian Plateau, Levant, and Mesopotamia”. The generous subsidy will enable Stefan Münger and Jürgen Zangenberg and the involved authors to publish the final reports of the Early Iron Age strata of Tel Kinrot, excavated by Kinneret Regional Project until 2008.
We are honoured to receive this prestigious grant and grateful towards the «White-Levy Program» and all our other – equally important – supporters of our work on the Northwestern shores of the Sea of Galilee.
Putting the Pieces of the Puzzle Together - The 2009 Study Season
05/07/09 11:00

During the entire two weeks, both the Kinrot and Kur teams worked through different kinds of material, checked the documentation and supplemented the vast electronic database. For the Horvat Kur team, the campaign started with taking part in a symposium on “Graeco-Roman Galilee”, organized by Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee and Tel Hai Academic College between June 21-23, during which Jürgen Zangenberg presented a paper on “Exploring Galilean Village Culture. The Kinneret Regional Project Trial Excavations on Horvat Kur 2008”, co-authored by Lucas Petit, Mark van der Enden and himself (all Universiteit Leiden, NL). The paper will be published in the proceedings of the symposium.
Architect Bärbel Schöneweiss-Mehring and co-director Stefan Münger analyzed the architecture of “Field I” on Tel Kinrot, a massive and exceptionally well-preserved Iron Age-I domestic complex at the foot of Tel Kinrot, and produced a detailed reconstruction of the original building, including reflections about construction methods and a spatial analysis. The results of her work will be integrated into the final report. Several area reports written by staff members during previous seasons were checked and edited by the co-directors. They will form important parts of the final report. Daniella Vos (Research Master Student from Leiden) – assisted by Stefan Münger – worked with small finds and pottery and at the same time collected data for her research master project. Irina Gutman continued restoring pottery from Field I, this time with the help of volunteer and MA student Ellen van der Heide (Leiden University). Our experienced draftsperson Christa Lennert drew pottery and small finds, thereby adding important supplements to the database. Lukas Butscher (Master Student from the University of Berne) photographed many small finds and did an especially great job with the 82 coins found at Horvat Kur last year. The coins had been cleaned by the laboratories of the Hebrew University before the campaign and were now identified and catalogued by co-director Jürgen Zangenberg with the help of Leiden University volunteer Petra van den Berg. With the assistance of volunteers Tine Rassalle (MA student Leiden University) and Juho Sankamo (University of Turku/FIN) Lucas Petit and Mark van der Enden carried out ceramic and small finds analysis that will help putting Horvat Kur and surroundings on the archaeological map of Roman and Byzantine Galilee. Raimo Hakola represented Helsinki University and explored possibilities to open the Kinneret Regional Project excavation and field school programme to especially train students of the New Testament from Scandinavia.
The study season has been very effective, we plan to return and continue next year, possibly adding some more excavation and survey activity on Horvat Kur.
We thank the fantastic staff of Karei Deshe Guest House who again made life very pleasant for us and we are grateful to our generous sponsors that made the 2009 campaign possible: University of Berne, University of Helsinki, Leiden University and Schröter Stiftung (Neustadt/Germany).











