An Extremely rare document from the First Temple-period is exposed

Ғылым және технология

In a joint intelligence operation, the Antiquities theft Prevention Unit of the Israel Antiquities Authority, and Professor Shmuel Ahituv, recipient of the Israel Prize for Biblical Studies, with the help of the Ministry of Culture and Sport and the Ministry of Jerusalem and Heritage, succeeded in repatriating a First Temple-period document, dated to the late seventh or early sixth century BCE. The document is written in ancient Hebrew script on papyrus, and it was probably found in the Judean Desert caves.
The extremely rare document is composed of four torn lines that begin with the words “To Ishmael send….”, the text hinting that it is a fragment of a letter containing instructions to the recipient. Based on the writing, it is proposed to date the ‘Ishmael Papyrus’ to the seventh to sixth centuries BCE, joining only two other documents from this period in the Israel Antiquities Authority Dead Sea Scrolls collection. All three papyri come from the Judean Desert, where the dry climate enables the preservation of the papyri.
The story began when Dr. Ada Yardeni, scholar of Ancient Hebrew Script, passed away in June 2018, and Prof. Shmuel Ahituv was asked to complete the publication of a document she was working on. Ahituv was surprised to encounter the photograph of a rare and, until then unknown, document from the First Temple period, together with Yardeni’s preliminary decipherment. This led to a joint campaign by Ahituv and the Antiquities theft Prevention Unit of the Israel Antiquities Authority to locate the whereabouts of the original document.
The intelligence mission succeeded, and the person who owned the papyrus, a resident of Montana, USA, was located. He explained that the papyrus was given to his mother when she visited Jerusalem in 1965, by Joseph Sa‘ad, Curator of the Rockefeller Museum, and Halil Iskander Kandu, a well-known antiquities dealer from Bethlehem, who many years ago sold thousands of Dead Sea scroll fragments. Back home, his mother hung the framed scroll fragment on the wall.
In order to persuade the owner to transfer the fragile document to Israel, where it would be conserved in climate-controlled conditions, he was invited to visit the Israel Antiquities Authority Judean Desert Scroll Department’s Conservation Laboratory in Jerusalem. After the visit, the owner was convinced that here were the best conditions to conserve and research the rare document, and he generously gave it to the Israel Antiquities Authority.
The Dead Sea Scrolls Unit conserved the papyrus and documented it with the modern multispectral system used to monitor the state of the scrolls.
In order to confirm that the document was genuine, a small sample was radiometrically dated in the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot. The sample provided a date similar to that determined by the paleographic evaluation (based on the letter forms), thus consolidating the dating towards the end of the First Temple period.
The document was researched by Prof. Ahituv, and his findings will be presented next Thursday at the Israel Antiquities Authority’s First Judean Desert Conference at the Bible Lands Museum in Jerusalem.
According to Professor Shmuel Ahituv, “The name Ishmael mentioned in the document, was a common name in the Biblical period, meaning ‘God will hear’. It first appears in the Bible as the name of the son of Abraham and Hagar, and it is subsequently the personal name of several individuals in the Bible, including Yishmael ben Netanyahu, who murdered the governor Gedaliah ben Ahikam. It also appears as the name of officials on paleographic finds such as bullae (clay stamp seals) used for sealing royal documents in the administration of the Kingdom of Judah, for example the bulla reading, ‘To Yishmael, son of the king’. The present document probably certified a dispatchment either to, or from, Yishmael.”
“Towards the end of the First Temple period, writing was widespread,” says Dr. Joe Uziel, Director of the Israel Antiquities Authority Judean Desert Scrolls Unit. “This is evident from many finds, including groups of ostraca (documents written on pottery sherds) and stamp seals with writing, that have been discovered in many ancient urban settlements, including in the royal capital of Jerusalem. However, First Temple-period documents written on organic materials-such as this papyrus-have scarcely survived. Whilst we have thousands of scroll fragments dating from the Second Temple period, we have only three documents, including this newly found one, from the First Temple period. Each new document sheds further light on the literacy and the administration of the First Temple period.”

Пікірлер: 15

  • @GuantanamoBayBarbie2
    @GuantanamoBayBarbie2 Жыл бұрын

    I heard about your channel via one of my podcasts. Right away I came here to check you out, & to see if you had any videos in English. I'm thrilled that you do!! English subtitles would be cool too, if its any easier. I am an American Christian, but I love my Hebrew brothers and sisters. I pray for you, and the country G-d gave you. I anticipate the day you will finally get it all. But a few things have to happen between now and then. Until that time I will continue to defend you, pray for you, and be grateful for the time I spent with the orthodox family I kept house for. It was a very special time in my life! I learned about the moedim & their prophetic implications, & learned how they observed those, and the sabbaths. It was an inside look at Orthodox Jewish culture, family, and the heartbreak of German concentration camps. Both the husband's mother and also his father were the sole survivors of their large extended families. They met and married after the war. They only spoke of it once in my hearing, and only very briefly. I totally understand why. I can't even write this without crying. I will never forget the image of those numbers tattooed above their wrists. I went back to my dishes, weeping. It makes me very angry when people deny that the holocaust ever happened. 🙏🏼❤ 🕎 ❤🙏🏼

  • @MitzvosGolem1
    @MitzvosGolem1 Жыл бұрын

    תודה רבה שלום

  • @thewolfethatcould8878
    @thewolfethatcould8878 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing, just amazing!

  • @marcoponce85
    @marcoponce85 Жыл бұрын

    Thankful my Father can inspire, preserve and translate his precious word for us today, just as he promised. 2 Timothy 4:13 (KJB) The cloke that I left at Troas with Carpus, when thou comest, bring with thee, and the books, but especially the parchments.

  • @thewolfethatcould8878

    @thewolfethatcould8878

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly as he stated. Very hard to graple- the Entire Bible, Exactly as it says. Amazing!

  • @lindakutsubos1222

    @lindakutsubos1222

    Жыл бұрын

    I love ❤ when it's in English too.

  • @jamesbennett44
    @jamesbennett44 Жыл бұрын

    I love it when you put it out in english.

  • @richardglady3009
    @richardglady3009 Жыл бұрын

    Wonderful video. I know you can’t be specific, but I wonder where they were found? I am amazed at the scholar who can read those documents. Thank you.

  • @heavenbound1536
    @heavenbound1536 Жыл бұрын

    Am Chai Yisrael

  • @heard3879
    @heard3879 Жыл бұрын

    I wonder if it is a letter to the Ishmael mentioned in Jeremiah 41. That is amazing to think about!

  • @josephmedina6403

    @josephmedina6403

    Ай бұрын

    Why is the second coming of Jesus Christ in the old testament and the revelation ?

  • @kiwifruit27
    @kiwifruit27 Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like the Apostle Paul who said something similar

  • @ponyclub3198

    @ponyclub3198

    Жыл бұрын

    It dates 2700 years ago....

  • @kiwifruit27

    @kiwifruit27

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ponyclub3198 I know I was just pointing out the similarities

  • @jweeks6967
    @jweeks6967 Жыл бұрын

    քʀօʍօֆʍ

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