Identity area
Identifier
Authorized form of name
Parallel form(s) of name
Other form(s) of name
Type
- University
Contact area
Type
Address
Street address
Locality
Region
Country name
Postal code
Telephone
Fax
Note
Description area
History
The German Protestant Institute for Classical Studies of the Holy Land was founded on 19 June 1900 at the Synod in Eisenach by a resolution of the Protestant regional churches. The tasks of the Institute were already described in the deed of foundation: Accordingly, the Holy Land, with its diverse history, different cultures and religions, was to be explored in order to bring the findings to the professional world and make them comprehensible to the layman.
Since 1968, the German Evangelical Institute for Classical Studies of the Holy Land has been a church foundation under public law. The Institute is managed by the Evangelical Church of Germany in Hanover and is located in Jerusalem and Amman. The Institute cooperates closely with the German Archaeological Institute and enjoys the support of the Förderverein für das DEI.
Geographical and cultural context
Mandates/Sources of authority
Administrative structure
Records management and collecting policies
Buildings
Holdings
Library: The Institute's library currently contains approximately 13,000 volumes and 65 periodicals. The private library Conrad Schicks and the former library of the Prussian and German consulates in Jerusalem (https://www.deiahl.de/ueber-das-dei/institut-jerusalem/bibliothek/) form an important basic structure.
Gustaf Dalman's slide collection : A large part of Dalman's photo collection is now in the Gustaf Dalman Institute in Greifswald. But the German Evangelical Institute for Ancient Studies of the Holy Land (DEI) in Jerusalem is also in possession of several hundred photos of the first head of the institute. Special attention should be paid to 120 glass projection pictures (slides on glass plates), which were probably taken at the beginning of the 20th century. They were painstakingly coloured by hand, giving the viewer the unique opportunity to admire the Holy Land in colour after the turn of the century (https://www.deiahl.de/ueber-das-dei/institut-jerusalem/sammlung/diasammlung/).
Finding aids, guides and publications
Access area
Opening times
Mondays to Thursdays from 9:00 to 16:00 and Fridays from 9:00 to 13:00.
Access conditions and requirements
An appointment is needed.
Since the library is a pure reference library, unfortunately no copies can be borrowed. However, there is a copy facility as well as power and network connections for laptops.
Accessibility
Services area
Research services
Reproduction services
Public areas
Control area
Description identifier
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
Status
Level of detail
Dates of creation, revision and deletion
January 2017; November 2018
Language(s)
Script(s)
Sources
Maintenance notes
Author: Open Jerusalem http://openjlem.hypotheses.org/