I am glad to hear you clarify the archaeological comment.
Also please notice that the example, (Judas and the field of blood), I gave in my previous reply was a quote from the 1st chapter of the 1868 book and I was not actually making a claim for a biblical contradiction. I only included it for your convenience, to allow you to show me where there was disputable archaeological evidence, which you have since clarified.
I am, however, disappointed that someone who is devoted and good-hearted and willing to go to the lengths to thoroughly answer strangers' questions to hear you say the bible is void of contradictions. That is exactly what ignorant (not in a mean way) believers say, who themselves, have no justified reason to hold that kind of belief. It's like me saying I believe there's a pound of blueberries in my fridge. I don't know of anyone buying blueberries nor have there ever been blueberries in my house. So, do I actually have any warrantable reason for believing that to be the case? Without justification it is meaningless. Let's suppose there turns out to be a pound of blueberries in the fridge after all??? Did I know it? No. This is one of those rare Gettier cases. What if I said it was a miracle; would it be? No, it would only be coincidence. There are plenty of natural causes for blueberries arriving within my refrigerator.
Much the same for you claiming that the bible is error-free. That is almost claiming you have no idea of how the bible was put together or even what it is. You are making a claim for which you do not have knowledge, just faith. And that brings me back to what it means to have a meaningful conversation. Once you inject, sneak in, or allude to faith as your reasoning then you have abandoned what could have been an open, honest and meaningful conversation.
Without any original writing to compare it to you cannot say the bible is error-free. No one can know this. Now I could be wrong because you might have evidence that you would like to share, I'm open to that. But that burden is upon you.