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Palestine Exploration Fund

The Palestine Exploration Fund is a British society based in London. It was founded in 1865, shortly after the completion of the Ordnance Survey of Jerusalem by Royal Engineers of the War Department. The Fund is the oldest known organization in the world created specifically for the study of the Levant region, also known as Palestine.[1] Often simply known as the PEF, its initial objective was to carry out surveys of the topography and ethnography of Ottoman Palestine – producing the PEF Survey of Palestine. Its remit was considered to fall between an expeditionary survey and military intelligence gathering.[2] There was also strong religious interest from Christians; William Thomson, Archbishop of York, was the first President of the PEF.

As a result, the PEF had a complex relationship with Corps of Royal Engineers of the War Department.[3] The PEF members sent back reports to the UK on the need to salvage and modernise the Levant region.[4]

Claude R. Conder

Charles Warren

Lord Kitchener

Edward Henry Palmer

T. E. Lawrence

Kathleen Kenyon

Conrad Schick

Charles Wilson

Quarterly Statement (Q.S., 1869–1937)

Palestine Exploration Quarterly (PEQ, since 1937).

Syro-Palestinian archaeology

Egyptian Exploration Fund

The Palestine Oriental Society

(2008). Palestinian Walks: Forays into a Vanishing Landscape. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1416570097.

Shehadeh, Raja

Gibson, S. (1999) "British Archaeological Institutions in Mandatory Palestine, 1917-1948", Palestine Exploration Quarterly, 131, pp. 115–143.

Moscrop, J. J. (1999) Measuring Jerusalem: The Palestine Exploration Fund and British Interests in the Holy Land, Leicester University Press: London.  9780718502201.

ISBN

Levin, N. (2006) "The Palestine exploration fund map (1871–1877) of the holy land as a tool for analysing landscape changes: the coastal dunes of Israel as a case study", The Cartographic Journal, 43(1), pp. 45–67.

- official web site

Palestine Exploration Fund

Definition, from PEF website