Posted on 02/16/2019 11:43:44 AM PST by SunkenCiv
For the first time, the royal seal of King Hezekiah in the Bible was found in an archaeological excavation. The stamped clay seal, also known as a bulla, was discovered in the Ophel excavations led by Dr. Eilat Mazar at the foot of the southern wall of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. The discovery was announced in a press release by the Hebrew University of Jerusalems Institute of Archaeology, under whose auspices the excavations were conducted.
The bulla, which measures just over a centimeter in diameter, bears a seal impression depicting a two-winged sun disk flanked by ankh symbols and containing a Hebrew inscription that reads Belonging to Hezekiah, (son of) Ahaz, king of Judah. The bulla was discovered along with 33 other stamped bullae during wet-sifting of dirt from a refuse dump located next to a 10th-century B.C.E. royal building in the Ophel.
In the ancient Near East, clay bullae were used to secure the strings tied around rolled-up documents. The bullae were made by pressing a seal onto a wet lump of clay. The stamped bulla served as both a signature and as a means of ensuring the authenticity of the documents.
Jerusalem lies at the heart of Biblical archaeology. In the free eBook Jerusalem Archaeology: Exposing the Biblical City, learn about the latest finds in the Biblical worlds most vibrant city.
Hezekiah, son and successor of Ahaz and the 13th king of Judah (reigning c. 715686 B.C.E.), was known for his religious reforms and attempts to gain independence from the Assyrians.
(Excerpt) Read more at biblicalarchaeology.org ...
The royal seal of Hezekiah, king of Judah, was discovered in the Ophel excavations under the direction of archaeologist Eilat Mazar. Photo: Courtesy of Dr. Eilat Mazar; photo by Ouria Tadmor.
Biblical sources. The main account of Hezekiah’s reign is found in 2 Kings 1820, Isaiah 3639, and 2 Chronicles 2932 of the Hebrew Bible. Proverbs 25:1 mentions that it is a collection of King Solomon’s proverbs that were “copied by the officials of King Hezekiah of Judah”.
Thanks for sharing!
Hezekiah was, according to the Hebrew Bible, the son of Ahaz and the 13th king of Judah. Edwin Thiele concluded that his reign was between c. 715 and 686 BC. He is considered a very righteous king by the author of the Books of Kings. He is also one of the most prominent kings of Judah mentioned in the Bible and is one of the kings mentioned in the genealogy of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew.
Oldest written document ever found in Jerusalem discovered by Hebrew University
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem | July 12, 2010 | Unknown
Posted on 07/12/2010 10:40:47 AM PDT by decimon
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/2551142/posts
One of *those* topics.
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Everything just told seems in good agreement but for several things. First, three separate texts in the Scriptures, and so also Herodotus in his history of Egypt, tell of an unusual debacle suffered by the Assyrian army under Sennacherib. He won the battle of Eltekeh, close to Jaffa on the Mediterranean coast, against Sethos and Ethiopian generals, and properly recorded it; he continued warfare and carried it east into Elam, southeast into Babylon, west into Anatolia, north into the Caucasus, and beyond.
The realization that Sennacherib came again to Palestine on his ninth campaign was intially made by Rawlinson in 18~~...
Herodotus, too, told of only one campaign of Sennacherib, met by Sethos on the Palestinian frontier, when nature intervened. In Worlds in Collision I brought out the fact, neglected by the commentators of the Scriptures and of Herodotus alike, that the story of the sun having changed the rising and setting points four times since Egypt became a kingdom is included in Herodotus immediately following the story of the debacle Sennacheribs army suffered. The phenomenon of the sun returning on the sundial is described in all three biblical sources in the same context of Sennacheribs debacle. The Assyrian king for his part refrained from all military activity in the last seven or eight years of his life, and spent his time prostrated before the image of the god Nergal, the planet Mars, and was assassinated in that position by two of his sons.
The Assyrian Conquest: The Assyrians In Egypt: The Reign of King Hezekiah by Immanuel Velikovsky
Boy oh boy, would I like to get my hands on that book by Velikovsky! If nothing else, he’s interesting!
Thanks again for a great ping!
:o]
‘Face
FANTASTIC! Thanks for letting us know....
Love it.
You know, eventually every person comes to the knowledge that everything the Bible teaches is true.
Why would King Hezekiah have an, what I consider to be Egyptian, ankh on the seal?
A great king!
Maybe his ankhle or aunt was Egyptian.
No, as a matter of fact, they don't.
The link there is to one of the chapters of one of the unpublished "Ages in Chaos" volumes, there are two at that site, both worth reading, along with the supplementary material.
My pleasure.
Yeah, they do. Hebrews 9:27 applies.
The world population hit a billion in 1900 for the first time. Perhaps five of those people remain alive today. At least half of them died without it. So, no, they don't.
Did you consider they raise l realized the truth afterwards?
That reminds me of the recent announcement by biblical archaeologist, Dr. Steven Collins, on the discovery of the city of Sodom. When fellow archaeologists wondered why they had not found thiis city, that was larger than Jerusalem, he smiled and exid: "All you need is a trowel and the Bible".
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