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About CBRL
The Council for British Research in
the Levant (CBRL) is the British Academy sponsored institute for research into
the humanities and social sciences with research centres in Amman and Jerusalem
and field bases in Homs and Wadi Faynan. The CBRL promotes research in the
modern countries of Cyprus, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, the Palestinian Territories
and Syria, closely related to the former Bilad el-Sham.
We support
research
through the facilities in our research centres in
Amman and
Jerusalem, and at field bases in Homs
in Syria and Wadi Faynan in southern Jordan, through the provision
of travel grants, funding towards key strategic research, the employment of
research active staff, and fellowship schemes. CBRL office also provide
important links between the local academic communities and counterparts in the
UK, and assists UK researchers in discussions with government agencies.
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History
The CBRL was established in 1998,
and was in part the amalgamation of two bodies, the British School of
Archaeology in Jerusalem (BSAJ) and the British Institute in Amman for
Archaeology and History (BIAAH).
The British School of Archaeology
in Jerusalem was founded in 1919 by Professor John Garstang as a centre for
British fieldwork in Palestine and as a staff training institute for the
Antiquities Service of the British Mandate administration. In 1952, Kathleen
Kenyon re-established the School after the hiatus of World War II, and directed
major excavations at Jericho and Jerusalem. The School had always sponsored
projects elsewhere in the region, and this became impossible after the 1967 war.
In 1968 two truckloads of
excavation and kitchen equipment were moved from the BSAJ East of the Jordan
Valley for the use of School members operating out of Amman. Crystal Bennett
first took a room in the Philadelphia Hotel and then a flat from 1970 as an
office and base for British excavations in Jordan. In 1971 lectures were first
given in Amman, and in 1978 the British Academy formally notified the BSAJ that
it was giving a grant to a new and separate body. In 1998, following a review by
the British Academy and in the then optimistic spirit of the peace process, it
was decided to merge the two bodies into one. This merger process recognised
that the situation on the ground is not simple, and the CBRL therefore has its
regional headquarters in Amman and premises in the old BSAJ building in
Jerusalem.
In 2003 these were launched as the
British Institute (in Amman) and the Kenyon Institute (in Jerusalem) in honour
of one of the major figures of our past. Each building contains administrative
offices, research labs, accommodation, equipment, and libraries. The
libraries can be accessed through a shared
catalogue but each has a distinctive collection policy. The UK offices are now
based in the British Academy in London.
This history of the old institutions is only part of the story. Both the BSAJ
and BIAAH were dominated by archaeological and related research, and were very
much focused on the southern Levant. The CBRL has a much wider brief, sponsoring
research from the humanities and social sciences, and covering the whole of the
Levant. Our peer reviewed journal,
Levant, remains very much an archaeological
journal for the region and many of our current membership are still
archaeologists, but most of our staff now come from other disciplines, and the
research we support is very diverse and geographically spread.
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