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1st century BC – 1st century AD · New Testament era

Sea of Galilee Boat

The conserved ancient Galilee boat displayed at Ginosar
Warfieldian, CC BY-SA 4.0 — source

Two fishermen walking a drought-shrunken shoreline noticed old nails in mud, and out of that mud conservators eventually lifted an entire ancient working boat, patched and re-patched from a dozen kinds of scavenged timber — the vessel of owners who could not afford new wood. Radiocarbon and pottery place it squarely in the era of the Gospels. It would hold about thirteen men, a detail nobody planned and everybody notices.

What it is
A wooden fishing boat, 8.2 metres long, preserved in lake-bed mud
Date of artifact
1st century BC – 1st century AD
Discovered
the exposed lakebed near Kibbutz Ginosar, during a severe drought, 1986 (brothers Moshe and Yuval Lufan)
Where it is now
Yigal Allon Centre, Kibbutz Ginosar
Related to
The working boats of the Gospel fishermen
Scripture
Mark 4:35–41 · John 21:1–14
What this find showsThis is the kind of boat the Gospel scenes assume — its size, build and era make narratives of a teacher and twelve companions crossing the lake entirely realistic.
What it does not proveThere is no connection to Jesus or his disciples personally; the popular nickname “Jesus Boat” claims more than the evidence ever could.
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