Abt 1927 - 2000 (~ 73 years)
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Name |
Ephraim Jeremiah "Jerry" Vardaman |
Prefix |
Dr |
Nickname |
Jerry |
Born |
Abt 1927 |
Dallas, Texas |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
18 Nov 2000 |
Starkville, Mississippi |
Buried |
Oddfellows Cemetery, Starkville, Mississippi |
Person ID |
i4638 |
Treespot |
Last Modified |
12 Jun 2018 |
Father |
Ephraim Jeremiah Vardaman, b. 29 Jan 1876, Denton, Collin County, Texas , d. 10 Nov 1928, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas (Age 52 years) |
Mother |
Daisy McCollough, b. 18 May 1892, Wylie, Tarrant County, Texas , d. 17 Jul 1971, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas (Age 79 years) |
Family ID |
F1687 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Documents
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| Newspaper Article 1963 July (Associated Press - Multiple Newspapers) Dr. E Jerry Vardeman,archaeology professor at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, had charge of the digging at an excavation site at Caesarea, Israel on the Mediterranean Coast, where a marble fragment was found with the "earliest known Hebrew references to Nazareth." |
| Newspaper Article 1966 May (Multiple Newspapers) In June 1961, Mr. Jerome Eisenberg, director of the Royal-Athena Galleries in New York City, established the Eisenberg Museum of Egyptian and Near Eastern Antiquities at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky due to his friendship with Dr. E. J. Vardaman of the Seminary which started over a chance meeting at a museum in Jerusalem. |
| Newspaper Article 1985 12/23 The Chillicothe Constitution Tribune Chillicothe, Missouri Jim Fleming, founder and dean of the Jerusalem Center for Biblical Studies, based his theory that Jesus was not actually born on Dec. 25, 1 A.D. but about 12 B.C. from an unpublished work by Jerry Vardaman, professor of Archaeology at the Cobb Institute of Archaeology of Mississippi State University in Starkville, Mississippi. |
| Newspaper Article 1986 12/22 The Gettysburg Times Gettysburg, Pennsylvania Jerry Vardaman, professor of Archaeology at the Cobb Institute of Archaeology of Mississippi State University in Starkville, Mississippi deciphered a stone tablet called the Aemilius Secundus discovered 300 years ago in Beirut and housed in Italy's Venice Museum. The inscription describes a census ordered by Quirinius, Governor of Syria, a few years before 10 B.C. According to the Gospel of Luke, (Luke 2:2) Quirinius was Governor at the time of the census that sent Mary and Joseph from their home in Nazareth to Bethlehem, Joseph's home town. |
| Dr. E Jerry Vardaman, professor of archeology and religion, Lecture 1 a former professor at Southern Baptist Theological University for 14 years and Hong Kong Baptist seminaries; an ordained Baptist minister; and founding director of the Cobb Institute of Archeology at
Mississippi State University starting in 1973. He "retired" in 1994. |
| Dr. E Jerry Vardaman, professor of archeology and religion, Lecture 2 a former professor at Southern Baptist Theological University for 14 years and Hong Kong Baptist seminaries; an ordained Baptist minister; and founding director of the Cobb Institute of Archeology at Mississippi State University starting in 1973. He "retired" in 1994. |
| Dr. E Jerry Vardaman, professor of archeology and religion, Lecture 3 a former professor at Southern Baptist Theological University for 14 years and Hong Kong Baptist seminaries; an ordained Baptist minister; and founding director of the Cobb Institute of Archeology at Mississippi State University starting in 1973. He "retired" in 1994. |
| Dr. E Jerry Vardaman, professor of archeology and religion, Biblical Chronology a former professor at Southern Baptist Theological University for 14 years and Hong Kong Baptist seminaries; an ordained Baptist minister; and founding director of the Cobb Institute of Archeology at Mississippi State University starting in 1973. He "retired" in 1994. |
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