In December 1918, while Palestine was still under control of a
British military administration, a Proclamation for the protection of antiquities was issued. The Ordinance was designed to follow principles outlined in the abortive
Treaty of Sèvres, which were later included as Article 21 in the
Mandate for Palestine. The Ordinance was replaced in 1929 and amended in 1934 and 1946. The department included subdivisions for inspectors, a records office and library, a conservation laboratory, a photographic studio, and the museum. The department was located in a building called "Way House", north of the
Old City of Jerusalem. The
British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem, established in 1919, also occupied the building until 1930. The
Palestine Archaeological Museum, which was managed by the department, was also in Way House until 1935, when it moved with the department to a new building in east Jerusalem donated by
John D. Rockefeller. The museum reopened to the public in 1938 and is now popularly known as the
Rockefeller Museum. == Directors ==