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Wednesday, September 02, 2009

The Bet Yerah Carved Stone



Photo: The Bet Yerah carved stone bearing archaic Egyptian signs







In a previous post, I reported on the rare archaeological discovery at Tel Bet Yerah (Khirbet el-Kerak) of a rare stone fragment bearing archaic Egyptian signs. In that post, I did not publish an image of the carved stone. Stephen Smuts at Biblical Paths has graciously supplied me with a copy of the image of the Bet Yerah carved stone above.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary


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Tuesday, September 01, 2009

A Rare Archaeological Discovery

The Jerusalem Post is reporting that archaeologists digging at Tel Bet Yerah (Khirbet el-Kerak) have discovered a rare stone fragment bearing archaic Egyptian signs. Although the site may not be familiar to many people, it was an important site in antiquity. William F. Albright, the famous American archeologist, once said that this tel is “perhaps the most remarkable Bronze Age site in all Palestine.” The reason, according to the news report published in The Jerusalem Post, is because the site “presents the most complete sequence of the transition from village to city life in ancient Canaan.”

The following is an excerpt from the article:

Although Egyptian-Israeli relations have been frosty in recent years, ties between the two lands were vibrant around 3,000 BCE during the Early Bronze Age - at least according to Tel Aviv University and University College London archeologists who discovered a rare, four-centimeter-long stone fragment at the point where the Jordan River exits Lake Kinneret.

The piece, part of a carved stone plaque bearing archaic Egyptian signs, was the highlight of the second season of excavations at Tel Bet Yerah (Khirbet el-Kerak). The site lies along an ancient highway that connected Egypt to the wider world of the ancient Near East.

The dig, carried out within the Beit Yerah National Park, was completed there last week by a joint team headed by TAU's Raphael Greenberg and David Wengrow from England.

Earlier discoveries, both in Egypt and at Bet Yerah, have indicated that there was direct interaction between the site - then one of the largest in the Jordan Valley - and the Egyptian royal court. The new discovery suggests that these contacts were of far greater local significance than had been suspected.

The archeologists noted that the fragment - which depicts an arm and hand grasping a scepter and an early form of the ankh sign - was the first artifact of its type ever found in an archaeological site outside Egypt. It has been attributed to the period of Egypt's First Dynasty, at around 3000 BCE.

Finds of this nature are rare even within Egypt itself, they said, and the signs are executed to a high quality, as good as those on royal cosmetic palettes and other monuments dating to the origins of Egyptian kingship.

Read the article in its entirety by clicking here.

Claude Mariottini
Professor of Old Testament
Northern Baptist Seminary

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