J. O. Kinnaman
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J. O. Kinnaman
John Ora Kinnaman (February 23, 1877 – September 7, 1961), known as J. O. Kinnaman, was an American biblical scholar and biblical archaeologist. Career Born in Bryan, Ohio, Kinnaman graduated from Tri-State College, Indiana in 1894, and received his PhD in archeology from the Sapienza University of Rome, University of Rome in 1907. He then accepted a teaching position at Lake Michigan College, Benton Harbor College, where he would be later be made Dean. Near-East Archeology Kinnaman was one of the 20 people to be on the expedition led by Howard Carter that discovered the tomb of Tutankhamun in 1922, and the last remaining survivor of the expedition. He would later pursue the field of Near-East archeology, where he served as the Member of the Palestinian Exploration Fund of Great Britain, Vice President of the Society for the Study of the Apocrypha of Great Britain, Life Member of the Society of International Archeologists, Editor-in-Chief of ''The American Antiquarian'' and O ...
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Biblical Archaeologist
''Near Eastern Archaeology'' is an American journal covering art, archaeology, history, anthropology, literature, philology, and epigraphy of the Near Eastern and Mediterranean worlds from the Palaeolithic through Ottoman periods. The journal is written for a general audience and is published quarterly by the American Schools of Oriental Research. The current editor is Thomas Schneider. Almost all articles undergo peer review prior to publication. The journal is electronically archived by JSTOR with a three-year moving wall. ''The Biblical Archaeologist'' (1938-1997) The journal was established in 1938 by archaeologist George Ernest Wright as ''The Biblical Archaeologist'', out of "the need for a readable, non-technical, yet thoroughly reliable account of archaeological discoveries as they are related to the Bible..."1938 "Announcement, " ''The Biblical Archaeologist'', p. 4. In 1998 it was renamed ''Near Eastern Archaeology'', to reflect the publication's broader geographic, c ...
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