Cline received his B.A. in Classical Archaeology atDartmouth College in 1982 and his M.A. in Near Eastern Languages and Literatures atYale University in 1984.[1]
Cline is an active field archaeologist with more than 30 seasons of excavation and survey experience in Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Cyprus, Greece, Crete, and the United States, including ten seasons at the site ofMegiddo (biblicalArmageddon) in Israel, from which he has retired after serving as co-director withIsrael Finkelstein of Tel Aviv University.[1][5] He is currently co-director, with Assaf Yasur-Landau of the University of Haifa, of the renewed excavations atTel Kabri, Israel, which have been conducted since 2005.[6] Discoveries by Cline and his team include the Near East's oldest wine cellar.[7]
Cline has won awards for his books six times—he is a two-time winner of theAmerican Schools of Oriental Research "Nancy Lapp Popular Book Award" (2014 and 2018)[8] and a three-time winner of theBiblical Archaeology Society's "Best Popular Book on Archaeology" Award (2001, 2009, and 2011);[9] in addition, a volume that he co-edited won the 2019 G. Ernest Wright Award from the American Schools of Oriental Research.[10] He has also won both national and local teaching awards, including the national "Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching" Award from the Archaeological Institute of America (2005) and the GWU "Morton Bender Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching" Award (2004).[1] In addition, he has received the two highest awards given at GWU: one for teaching, the "Oscar and Shoshana Trachtenberg Award for Teaching Excellence" (2012),[11] and the other for scholarly research, the "Oscar and Shoshana Trachtenberg Award for Faculty Scholarship" (2011).[12] He is the first faculty member in GWU history to have won both awards. Most recently, in 2024 he received the GWU OVPR Distinguished Career Award.[13] He has also been nominated three times for the CASE US Professor of the Year (2008, 2009, and 2012). In May 2015, he was awarded an honorary doctorate fromMuhlenberg College.[14] In July 2015, he was named a member of the inaugural class of NEH Public Scholars, receiving the award for his book project entitledDigging Up Armageddon: The Search for the Lost City of Solomon, which was published by Princeton University Press in March 2020.[15] In Fall 2018, Cline was named an honorary member of the world's first Archaeology fraternity, Delta Iota Gamma ("DIG").[16] Cline was named a Getty Scholar for the 2020–21 academic year, but postponed until Fall 2021 because of the pandemic.[17]
Cline is the author or editor of more than 20 books.[18] Many have been translated, into a total of 19 languages, including French, German, Italian, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, Greek, Arabic, Turkish, Korean, Chinese (both Simplified and Traditional), Japanese, Russian, Czech, Serbian, Bulgarian, Polish, and Hungarian.[18] His books include:
Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea: International Trade and the Late Bronze Age Aegean (1994; reprinted 2009),ISBN0-86054-765-5
The Aegean and the Orient in the Second Millennium. Proceedings of the 50th Anniversary Symposium, Cincinnati, 18–20 April 1997 (1998), edited with Diane Harris-Cline (out of print, but available for free download)
Amenhotep III: Perspectives on His Reign (1998), edited with David B. O'Connor,ISBN0-472-10742-9
The Battles of Armageddon: Megiddo and the Jezreel Valley from the Bronze Age to the Nuclear Age (2000),ISBN0-472-09739-3 (Winner, 2001 Biblical Archaeology Society "Best Popular Book on Archaeology")
Jerusalem Besieged: From Ancient Canaan to Modern Israel (2004),ISBN0-472-11313-5
The Ancient Egyptian World (2005), written with Jill Rubalcaba,ISBN978-0-19-517391-8
Thutmose III: A New Biography (2006), edited with David B. O'Connor,ISBN978-0472114672.
From Eden to Exile: Unraveling Mysteries of the Bible (2007),ISBN1-4262-0084-6 (Winner, 2009 Biblical Archaeology Society "Best Popular Book on Archaeology")
Biblical Archaeology: A Very Short Introduction (2009),ISBN0-19-534263-1 (Winner, 2011 Biblical Archaeology Society "Best Popular Book on Archaeology")
Digging for Troy: From Homer to Hisarlik (2011), written with Jill Rubalcaba,ISBN978-1-58089-327-5
Ancient Empires: Formation and Resistance in the Near Eastern, Greco-Roman, and Early Muslim Worlds (2011), written with Mark W. Graham,ISBN0-521-71780-9
The Ahhiyawa Texts (2011), written with Gary Beckman and Trevor Bryce,ISBN1-58983-268-X
Ramesses III: The Life and Times of Egypt’s Last Hero (2012), edited with David B. O'Connor,ISBN0-472-11760-2
Three Stones Make a Wall: The Story of Archaeology (2017),ISBN978-0691183237 (Winner, 2018 ASOR “Nancy Lapp Best Popular Book” Award)
The Social Archaeology of the Levant: From Prehistory to the Present (2019), co-edited with Assaf Yasur-Landu and Yorke Rowan,ISBN978-1107156685 (Winner, 2019 ASOR “G. Ernest Wright” Award)
Digging Up Armageddon: The Search for the Lost City of Solomon (2020),ISBN978-0691166322
Back to the Beginning withChristiane Amanpour (ABC News):Garden of Eden,Biblical Noah's Ark Replica Sails in the Netherlands,Searching for Noah's Ark,Joshua and Conquest of Canaan,David, the Bible's First Real Hero,Search for the Ark of the Covenant
King Solomon's Mines (National Geographic Channel)
Biblical Plagues (National Geographic Channel)
Jerusalem: Center of the World (PBS)
Countdown to Armageddon (History Channel)
Mysteries/Science of the Bible (National Geographic Channel):Ark of the Covenant,Exodus Revealed,Lost Cities,Secrets of Revelation,Noah's Ark, andLost Kings of the Bible (David and Solomon)
Secrets of the Aegean Apocalypse (Mystery of the Sea Peoples) (History Channel)
Is It Real: Atlantis (National Geographic Channel)
The Truth of Troy (BBC)
Joshua and the Battle of Jericho (Discovery Channel)
Time Titans (Pilot Episode, did not air) (History Channel)
^abcdefgh"Eric H. Cline". Department of Classical and Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations – George Washington University. Retrieved16 December 2019.
^"People". GWU Capitol Archaeological Institute. Retrieved17 April 2011.