In the 1970's, academic activities resumed in the Semitic
Museum, which is again home to the Department of Near Eastern Languages and
Civilizations, and to the University's collections of Near Eastern
archaeological
artifacts. These artifacts comprise over 40,000 items, including pottery,
cylinder seals, sculpture, coins and cuneiform tablets. Many are from
museum-sponsored excavations in Israel, Jordan, Iraq, Egypt, Cyprus,
and Tunisia. The Museum is dedicated to the use of these collections
for the teaching, research, and publication of Near Eastern archaeology,
history, and culture.
Exhibition and Education
The Museum, through the collaborative efforts of departmental
faculty, curators, museum curatorial staff and students, mounts exhibits,
often in conjunction with university courses, which not only serve the
University community, but also attract the general public. The Museum
has an active public outreach program featuring tours for school groups
and teacher training workshops. The Museum also sponsors, either alone
or in conjunction with other institutions, a number of public lectures
each year. Through these educational efforts, the Museum seeks to promote
a wider understanding of the civilizations of the Near East and their
great cultural legacies.
Research and Publication
The Semitic Museum sponsors archaeological field research
into the complex societies of the Near East, with special emphasis on
those ancient cultures related to the world of the Bible. Each year
more than 100 staff, students, and volunteers participate in the Ashkelon
Excavations (The Leon Levy Expedition), led by Museum Director and Dorot
Professor of the Archaeology of Israel Lawrence E. Stager.
The Museum, through its Harvard Semitic Series and Harvard
Semitic Monographs, publishes archaeological, historical, philological,
and cultural studies of the Near East, many of which present the research
of the department faculty and their students.
The Shelby White-Leon Levy Program for Archaeological
Publications provides grants to support publication of archaeological
fieldwork terminated some time ago and still unpublished in the Levant
and the Aegean. Preference is given to projects from the Neolithic to
the Medieval. The funded research must result in a final
report.