Posted on 04/28/2012 7:56:11 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
The caves in which the purification baths were found were 'caves of refuge,' where Jews who lived in the area sought shelter under Roman rule.
A fifth mikveh has been found in the caves on the Galilee's Cliffs of Arbel, indicating that the people who lived there under Roman rule were most likely kohanim, Jews of the priestly class, said Yinon Shivtiel, one of the researchers who found the ritual bath...
The caves in which the purification baths were found were "caves of refuge," where Jews who lived in the area sought shelter under Roman rule, particularly during the Jewish revolt that ended with the destruction of the Second Temple.
According to Shivtiel, the effort needed to build mikvehs under such difficult circumstances indicates that these cave dwellers were probably kohanim...
Shivtiel and Vladimir Boslov of the Hebrew University's cave research unit have already discovered 500 caves of refuge during the comprehensive survey they've been conducting under the auspices of the Israel Nature and Parks Authority...
The mikveh builders at Arbel assured supplies of natural water by either building the ritual baths directly under still-dripping stalactites or by digging tunnels from the mikvehs to outside the rock wall, so that runoff from rainwater could accumulate.
Three of the mikvehs on the cliffs were documented by archaeologist Ronny Reich of Hebrew University, but Shivtiel and Boslov discovered two more.
Other findings that they and others have uncovered in the Arbel region show that these cave dwellers lived at subsistance level and in crowded conditions. They had water, food and light, as evidenced by the water-storage pits, niches for candles, and remnants of cooking pots and pitchers, but no more than that...
(Excerpt) Read more at haaretz.com ...
Yinon Shivtiel inside a mikveh in a cave in the Galilee, where Jews sought shelter under Roman rule. [Photo by: Liora Ben Haim]
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Cool.
Were ancient “full-service” bathhouses Bar Mikvehs?
I will ask someone who knows, but I am unaware of kohanim having any special need for mikvahs in the absence of the Temple service.
It would seem more likely to indicate the presence of women or perhaps just the especially pious.
They took me into the basement of an ancient house where more arab families lived. They showed me a series of tunnels that led down into a series of burial chambers where I had to stoop low and be careful not to hit my head. As an amateur, I didn't recognize ritual baths as such until later. There were hebrew characters written in these small rooms. Burial boxes were broken and had obviously been looted long, long ago. Incomplete skeletal remains were everywhere.
I was exhausted by all the effort it took just to squeeze into these tiny rooms. I asked the boys if we could stop and rest. They pointed to what they called 'the teepee room'. It was shaped just like a pointed pyramid and featured a vent blackened by ancient fires. People had written their initials and messages in the black soot. Names and dates appeared that were from the 19th Century. There was also a primitive type of tick-tack-toe that only had six boxes, the boys motioned to the act of rolling dice. Later, I learned that these were Roman soldiers who gambled, a popular dice game. We finally left the tunnel complex via a vacant lot behind the ruins of an ancient church. Tour groups that were walking inside the church saw us leave and started asking me questions. I acted like I didn't understand them. I gave the boys some pocket money and wished them Good-bye. When our bus left the hotel next morning both of them were waving and watching me from a crowd of hustlers selling their postage cards and pictures. The little guy ran up to me and handed me an old figurine wrapped in a bunch of newspaper.
Later, I showed it to one of the teaching professors in our group that worked at the British Museum. He looked at it for a real long period of time before asking where I found it. He said it was a valuable funerary figurine, which ancient Roman's used to worship their family ancestors. He convinced me to donate it to his museum.
I wouldn’t have shown it to anyone. It would have been in MY collection. ‘Course it would be difficult to get past customs with something like that. I LOVE reading about Biblical (times) archeological finds.
Sounds like Indiana Jones stuff.
Another personal experience detailing the ruination of irreplacable historical sites by Arabs. How sad.
Wow, interesting!
Stuff and nonsense. Married Jewish women go to the mikveh once a month, seven days after the conclusion of their periods. Thus, the existence of the mikveh more likely indicates that intact families were taking refuge in the caves. Kohanim would need to cleanse themselves before eating such sanctified food as truma and first fruits, and before serving in the Bet Hamikdash. Since they were taking refuge, that would eliminate the latter eventuality, and leave the sanctified fruits, which would still be forbidden to eat if the Israelite who gave it to them was not in a clean state, through touching a dead body, a dead bug, or some other contaminating factor, so while in hiding it’s unlikely they were eating any sanctified foods, either. Married women, in contrast, can not have sex with their husbands until purifying themselves in a mikveh. Men and women have sex in the most trying of circumstances, sometimes especially then. Honestly, these archaeologists are thick sometimes.
Don’t sweat it. Everybody ruins archaeological sites. A lot of important archaeological sites have come to light thanks to the hustling of Arab urchins (the entire Qumran complex, for example), so it balances out.
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