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Biblical palace found (?) near Old City (King David's Palace)
Ynetnews ^ | 10/14/05 | David Hazony

Posted on 10/15/2005 4:51:06 PM PDT by wagglebee

The field of biblical archeology has been rocked, so to speak, by dramatic new finds in the heart of ancient Jerusalem.

For the last few years, a number of respected archaeologists have posited that the biblical accounts of Jerusalem as the seat of a powerful, unified monarchy under the rule of David and Solomon are essentially false.

The most prominent of these is Israel Finkelstein, chairman of Tel Aviv University’s archeology department, whose 2001 book, "The Bible Unearthed," written together with Neal Asher Silberman, became an international best seller. The lynchpin of his argument was the absence of clear evidence from the archeological excavations carried out in Jerusalem over the last century.

“Not only was any sign of monumental architecture missing,” he wrote, “but so were even simple pottery shards.” If David and Solomon existed at all, he concluded, they were no more than “hill-country chieftains,” and Jerusalem, as he told The New York Times, was “no more than a poor village at the time.”

But now comes word of a most unusual find: The remains of a massive structure, in the heart of biblical Jerusalem, dating to the time of King David.

Eilat Mazar, the archeologist leading the expedition, suggests it may be none other than the palace built by David and used by the Judaean kings for more than four centuries. If she is right, this would mean a reconsideration of the archeological record with regard to the early First Temple period. It would also deal a deathblow to the revisionist camp, whose entire theory is predicated on the absence of evidence in Jerusalem from this period. But is she right? According to the book of Samuel, when David conquered the Jebusite city of Jerusalem around the year 1000 B.C.E., he did not destroy it, but instead left it standing, including its great citadel to defend the city along its northern approach.

In this city, today known as the City of David, a neighborhood just to the south of Jerusalem’s Old City, he added a few things as well - most notably a palace built by master craftsmen sent by the Phoenician king Hiram of Tyre, who had concluded an alliance with David against their mutual enemy, the Philistines.

According to archeological evidence, Jerusalem was already an ancient city, founded some 2,000 years before David arrived, and fortified with walls as much as 1,000 years before. Because of its unique topography - a high hill nestled between two deep valleys that converge at its southern point, graced with abundant water from the Gihon spring, and exposed to attack only along a ridge from the north - the location was ideal for the capital of David’s kingdom.

Based on this evidence, coupled with textual clues as to the topography - as described in the book of II Samuel (5:17), when the Philistines mustered in Emek Refaim, David “descended to the citadel,” implying that the palace was higher up on the mountain than the citadel itself - Mazar formulated her proposal as to the location of the palace in a 1997 article in Biblical Archaeology Review .

“If some regard as too speculative the hypothesis I shall put forth in this article,” she wrote, “my reply is simply this: Let us put it to the test in the way archeologists always try to test their theories - by excavation.”

Few living archeologists were better suited for this mission, as Mazar has extensive experience both in excavations at the City of David and at the Phoenician town of Achziv along the coast north of Haifa.

Indicators for the palace would include monumental structures dating to the late-11th or early-10th centuries B.C.E.; distinctive Phoenician-style building, which would have been out of place in the Judean mountains; and a new building created just to the north of the borders of the older Jebusite city, resting on new land, rather than on destruction layers.

Remarkable evidence

Of course, any additional archeological markers, such as inscriptions, pottery shards, or interior architecture, would further confirm such a find. In early 2005, after securing the necessary permits and the support of the Jerusalem-based Shalem Center (which also publishes Azure), the Hebrew University, and the City of David Foundation, Mazar began digging.

The evidence she found is remarkable. It includes a section of massive wall running about 100 feet (30 meters) from west to east along the length of the excavation, and ending with a right-angle corner that turns south and implies a very large building.

Within the dirt fill between the stones of the great wall were found pottery shards dating to the 11th Century B.C.E.; this is the earliest possible date for the walls’ construction.

Two additional walls, also large, running perpendicular to the first, contain pottery dating to the 10th Century B.C.E. - meaning that further additions were made after the time of David and Solomon or during their reign, suggesting that the building continued to be used and improved over a period of centuries.

The structure is built directly on bedrock along the city’s northern edge, with no archeological layers beneath it - a sign that this structure, built two millennia after the city’s founding, constituted a new, northward expansion of the city’s northern limit. And it is located at what was then the very summit of the mountain - a reasonable place indeed for the palace from which David “descended.”

This immediate evidence fits well with other archeological finds from the site, as well. In 1963, the renowned archeologist Kathleen Kenyon reported finding a Phoenician “proto-Aeolic capital,” or decorative stone column head dating to the same period, at the bottom of the cliff atop which the new excavation has taken place.

Kenyon wrote that this capital, along with other cut stones she found there, were “typical of the best period of Israelite building, during which the use of Phoenician craftsman was responsible for an exotic flowering of Palestinian architecture. It would seem, therefore, that during the period of monarchic Jerusalem, a building of some considerable pretensions stood on top of the scarp.”

Clay signet

In the early 1980s, Hebrew University’s Yigael Shiloh uncovered the enormous “stepped-stone” support structure which now appears to be part of the same complex of buildings.

And in the new excavation, Mazar has discovered a remarkable clay bulla, or signet impression, bearing the name of Yehuchal Ben Shelemiah, a noble of Judea from the time of King Zedekiah who is mentioned by name in Jeremiah 37:3, evidence suggesting that four centuries after David, the site was still an important seat of Judean royalty.

This matches the biblical account according to which the palace was in more or less continuous use from its construction until the destruction of Judea by the Babylonians in 586 B.C.E.

So, is it David’s palace? It is extremely difficult to say with certainty; indeed, no plaque has been found that says on it, “David’s Palace”; nor is it likely that such definitive evidence will ever be found.

And yet, the evidence seems to fit surprisingly well with the claim, and there are no finds that suggest the contrary, such as the idolatrous statuettes or ritual crematoria found in contemporary Phoenician settlements.

The location, size, style, and dating are all right, and it appears in a part of the ancient world where such constructions were extremely rare and represented the greatest sort of public works.

Could it be something else? Of course. Has a better explanation been offered to match the data - data which includes not only archeological finds, but the text itself? No.

There will be no shortage of well-meaning skeptics, including serious archeologists, who, having been trained in a scholarly world weary of exuberant romantics and religious enthusiasts prone to making sensational, irresponsible claims about having found Noah’s Ark, will be extremely reluctant to identify any new archeological find with particulars found in the Bible.

Others, driven by a concatenation of interests, ideologies, or political agendas, will seize on any shred of uncertainty in the building’s identification to distract attention from the momentousness of the find. Both groups will invoke professionalism and objectivity to pooh-pooh the proposition that this is David’s palace.

Don't be swayed

They will raise the bar of what kind of proofs are required to say what it was to a standard that no archeological find could ever meet. Or they will simply dismiss it all as wishful thinking in the service of religious or Zionist motives.

There are two good reasons not to be swayed by such claims. The first is that even if this is not in fact David’s palace, there is no doubt that we are still talking about an archeological find of enormous moment. Whether it is a citadel, someone else’s palace, or a temple, it is the first-ever discovery of a major construction from the early Israelite period in Jerusalem to date.

This alone is enough to overturn the hypothesis of Finkelstein and others that Jerusalem at the time of David was a “poor village” incapable of being the capital of an Israelite kingdom.

No longer is it reasonable to claim, as did Tel Aviv University’s Ze’ev Herzog writing in Haaretz in 1999, basing his claim entirely on the absence of just this kind of evidence, that “the great unified monarchy was an imaginary historiosophic creation, invented at the end of the Judean period, at the very earliest.”

On the contrary: Now we have a major Israelite compound dating to the time of the unified monarchy, firmly establishing Jerusalem as a major city of its time.

For this reason, important voices in the archeological world have already begun declaring the find to be of great importance, even as they reserve judgment as to its identification as David’s palace.

“Due to all the possible historical implications, we need to look carefully at the pottery and to further excavate the area,” Seymour Gitin, director of archeology of W.F. Albright Institute in Jerusalem, told a nespaper. Yet he adds, “this is an extremely impressive find, and the first of its kind which can be associated with the 10th Century (B.C.E.).”

The normally reserved Amihai Mazar of Hebrew University, one of the most esteemed scholars in the field of biblical archaeology and author of the standard textbook, "Archaeology of the Land of the Bible, 10,000–586 B.C.E., has described the discovery as “something of a miracle.”

Yet beyond this, there also are good reasons to identify this building, at least provisionally, as the very palace described in the book of Samuel. This is methodologically sound, so long as we are willing to admit that future evidence could emerge, or a better theory be proposed, that might prompt a different conclusion.

Burden of proof

Right now we have before us two things: We have a biblical text describing in detail the creation of a Phoenician-style palace by David high up on a particular mountain, around the end of the 11th or beginning of the 10 Century B.C.E. And we have a grand structure of the Phoenician style dating from the same time, on the summit of that very mountain, located with assistance from the text and previous archeological discoveries.

This was not stumbled upon, moreover, but carefully hypothesized, and the current dig was proposed as the test. The likelihood of this happening by chance is extremely small.

Is this absolute proof? No. But it is enough to shift the burden of proof.

“You can never be sure about this sort of thing,” Mazar says. “But it seems that the theory that suggests this to be the very palace described in the book of Samuel as having been built by David is thus far the best explanation for the data. Anyone who wants to say otherwise ought to come up with a better theory.”

This is neither wishful thinking nor an imagined past, but good science.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Israel; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: archaeology; archeology; catastrophism; christianity; davidspalace; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; history; israel; jerusalem; judaism; kingdavid; palace
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Comment #21 Removed by Moderator

To: wagglebee

Oh yeah, so then where did Bathsheba live?


22 posted on 10/15/2005 5:40:48 PM PDT by D Rider
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To: Duffboy
If your God were Hebrew ( and , I have every reason to believe she/he was and the Mother Goddess is the Virgin Mary, do you suppose your God took communion and became Catholic? This could account for the reason he/she has been missing for 1000's of years and forsook the Jews in the Nazi era.

Step away from the suicide-bomb vest.

23 posted on 10/15/2005 5:43:04 PM PDT by M. Thatcher
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To: wagglebee

***If David and Solomon existed at all, ***

Not long ago a historian said that in another 2000 years people will be saying the same about Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln.


24 posted on 10/15/2005 5:48:12 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar (When someone burns a cross on your lawn, the best firehose is an AK-47.)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

If we can recreate our world in such a way that FDR, LBJ, Carter and Klintoon didn't exist, it would be a hell of a start!


25 posted on 10/15/2005 5:52:48 PM PDT by wagglebee ("We are ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom." -- President Bush, 1/20/05)
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To: Duffboy
to the Hebrews who asked my God of his identity he replied "I am". I Am was in existence long before there were Hebrews. The Virgin Mary became a natural mother after the birth of Christ. We are never instructed by scripture to worship her and there is no record of the early church doing so. God abandoned the Jews when Titus invaded Jerusalem. Those who died in the Holocaust(and this in no way is a defense for the murder of more than 6 million people) were not Jews. The Diaspora sent many jews to a area beneath the black sea where their national identity was lost thru intermarriage. The migration to Poland came about as a result of the invasions of the Rus into these areas.
26 posted on 10/15/2005 5:56:20 PM PDT by kublia khan (Absolute war brings total victory)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar; wagglebee
Not long ago a historian said that in another 2000 years people will be saying the same about Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln.

And, it will not take quite that long to doubt the existence of wagglebee ... LOL

27 posted on 10/15/2005 6:01:11 PM PDT by caryatid (Old times there are not forgotten!)
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To: John Williams
("In bacon and eggs, the chicken is merely involved. The hog is committed.")

I love your tag line. Just had a "birds and bees" refresher talk with my 18 year old daughter. She got it.

28 posted on 10/15/2005 6:08:00 PM PDT by Yellow Rose of Texas (WAR: 1/3 yes, 1/3 no, 1/3 undecided; So began the American Revolution)
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To: kublia khan

***Those who died in the Holocaust(and this in no way is a defense for the murder of more than 6 million people) were not Jews***

Let's not forget the Askinazi and Kazar tribes who converted to Judaism and bore the brunt of Nazi agression.

The Nazis also killed all the Shephardic jews they could find.


29 posted on 10/15/2005 6:26:57 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar (When someone burns a cross on your lawn, the best firehose is an AK-47.)
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To: wagglebee; truthandlife; Faith; xzins

WOW! Outstanding!


30 posted on 10/15/2005 6:32:40 PM PDT by Blogger
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar
My point exactly the vast majority of those killed as Jews in the Holocaust were in fact Kazars. The ruler of the kazars after a thorough examination of Christianity, Islam and Judaism embraced the latter in a political maneuver and forced the conversion of his nation to same.
31 posted on 10/15/2005 6:33:57 PM PDT by kublia khan (Absolute war brings total victory)
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To: Yellow Rose of Texas

bttt


32 posted on 10/15/2005 6:37:05 PM PDT by Guenevere (God bless our military!...and God bless the President of the United States!)
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To: wagglebee
Kenyon wrote that this capital, along with other cut stones she found there, were “typical of the best period of Israelite building, during which the use of Phoenician craftsman was responsible for an exotic flowering of Palestinian architecture.

Say what?

What is the reason for Kenyon using the Roman designation of Phoenician/Philistine in this context?

Mistake?

33 posted on 10/15/2005 6:57:24 PM PDT by Freedom_Fighter_2001 (When money is no object - it's your money they're talking about)
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To: Freedom_Fighter_2001

I didn't even catch that part. The article may be written by a liberal pro-PLO Israeli.


34 posted on 10/15/2005 6:59:12 PM PDT by wagglebee ("We are ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom." -- President Bush, 1/20/05)
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To: wagglebee

bookmark for later reading


35 posted on 10/15/2005 6:59:40 PM PDT by Zechariah11 (Was the Purpose Driven Life published in Laodecea?)
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To: jan in Colorado

FYI


36 posted on 10/15/2005 9:12:49 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (Understand islam understand evil - read THE LIFE OF MUHAMMAD free pdf see link My Page)
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To: wagglebee

Thanks Waggs.

"If she is right, this would mean a reconsideration of the archeological record with regard to the early First Temple period. It would also deal a deathblow to the revisionist camp, whose entire theory is predicated on the absence of evidence in Jerusalem from this period."

The revisionist camp followers were born brain dead.

I think we've got something in GGG about this, but will add to the keywords, then go find out if it needs to be pinged.


37 posted on 10/15/2005 9:47:38 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Down with Dhimmicrats! I last updated by FR profile on Sunday, August 14, 2005.)
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To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
Gods, Graves, Glyphs PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)

38 posted on 10/15/2005 9:56:56 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Down with Dhimmicrats! I last updated by FR profile on Sunday, August 14, 2005.)
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To: kublia khan; Alouette
God abandoned the Jews when Titus invaded Jerusalem. Those who died in the Holocaust(and this in no way is a defense for the murder of more than 6 million people) were not Jews. The Diaspora sent many jews to a area beneath the black sea where their national identity was lost thru intermarriage. The migration to Poland came about as a result of the invasions of the Rus into these areas.

Excuse me, but there's another religious point of view on this, plus you are dead wrong on the history of the Jews.

First of all, the Torah is VERY explicit that G-d will NEVER abandon the Jews. However, just as a child is punished by a loving parent for misbehaving (this is known as tough love), so can the children of G-d be punished for the same reason. G-d, through Moses in the Book of Deuteronomy, was very explicit about this, and also about NEVER abandoning the covenant that He made with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob regarding their descendants. Before the 2nd Temple fell, as was the case with the 1st, many Jews ceased to obey G-d's Law (or began to worship other "gods"), and as a result He removed His protection from the Jews and allowed them to be subject to the normal forces of history. Being a small nation, and a fractured one at that, in both cases the nation fell to more numerous/powerful opponents. However, G-d was very explicit in promising to never let the Jews be completely destroyed, and in promising that eventually, when the Jewish people repented and began to once again observe His laws as put forth in the Torah, that they would be redeemed and rewarded.

As to the nonsense about the victims of the Nazis not being Jews, it is just that - NONSENSE! Many, many Jews fled the destruction of the 2nd Temple to Egypt, to Italy and to Spain. Many also went to the then large Jewish communities in and around what is now Iraq (i.e. the place where the Jews were exiled to after the destruction of the 1st Temple, and from which many of their descendants never left). Many of these refugees, who indeed DID retain their religious character, later moved to France, then to Germany, then to Poland and to Russia. Most of these moves were less than voluntary - they were a matter of simple survival, as crusaders and debtors of the Jews found it far more convenient to either murder or exile the Jews than to have them stay around.

Undoubtedly, SOME Jews fled to the Black Sea region, and undoubtedly some of them intermarried and lost their heritage (as has been the case with all to many Jews in almost every land in almost every era), but a remnant remains - and always will, since G-d promises such in Deuteronomy.

Kublia Khan, you are SERIOUSLY misinformed, both about religion and about history. Go read a few books, including a Jewish version of the Bible. Maybe you'll learn something.

39 posted on 10/17/2005 10:06:04 AM PDT by Ancesthntr
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To: Ancesthntr

Amen.


40 posted on 10/18/2005 2:12:07 AM PDT by Bellflower (A new day is Coming!)
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