Archaeologists in Israel say that they
have found a clay seal mark that may bear the signature of the Biblical
Prophet Isaiah.
The 2,700-year-old stamped clay artifact was found during an excavation
at the foot of the southern wall of Jerusalem’s Temple Mount. In ancient
times a seal stamp, or bulla, was used to authenticate documents or
items.
“We found the eighth-century B.C.E. seal mark that may have been made by
the prophet Isaiah himself only 10 feet away from where we earlier
discovered the highly-publicized bulla of King Hezekiah of Judah," said
Dr. Eilat Mazar of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, in a statement.
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Dr. Mazar led the team that the found the seal mark linked to the
Biblical prophet. The artifact was found among undisturbed Iron Age
remains outside an ancient royal bakery.
The half-inch wide oval-shaped piece of clay is inscribed with the name
Yesha’yah[u] (Isaiah) in ancient Hebrew script. This is followed by the
word nvy, the end of which is slightly damaged. As a result, experts do
not know whether the word ended with the Hebrew letter aleph. That
letter “would have resulted in the Hebrew word for ‘prophet’ and would
have definitively identified the seal as the signature of the prophet
Isaiah,” explained Dr. Mazar. “The absence of this final letter,
however, requires that we leave open the possibility that it could just
be the name Navi.”
“The name of Isaiah, however, is clear,” she added.
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Isaiah’s close relationship with King Hezekiah is described in the
Bible’s Second Book of Kings.
“If it is the case that this bulla is indeed that of the prophet Isaiah,
then it should not come as a surprise to discover this bulla next to one
bearing King Hezekiah’s name given the symbiotic relationship of the
prophet Isaiah and King Hezekiah described in the Bible,” said Dr. Mazar.
The seal mark is just the latest fascinating archaeological in Israel.
Earlier this month, for example, experts revealed that they had
uncovered a rare multicolored Roman mosaic featuring three toga-wearing
figures during excavations in the ancient city of Caesarea.
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In January, archaeologists announced the discovery of a large
1,500-year-old pool and elaborate fountain at the site of an ancient
church near Jerusalem.
Last November, new evidence dated Christ’s tomb in Jerusalem’s Church of
the Holy Sepulchre to the Roman era, matching historical records.
Archaeologists also uncovered a stunning 1,500-year-old Christian mosaic
in the ancient Mediterranean coastal city of Ashdod-Yam, now part of the
modern city of Ashdod.
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ARCHAEOLOGISTS
Other finds include the skeleton of a pregnant woman, dating back 3,200
years, in Israel’s Timna Valley, at a place once called King Solomon’s
Mines.
In October 2017, archaeologists in Jerusalem announced that they have
uncovered a new section of the Western Wall that has been hidden for
1,700 years.
Also in 2017 an ancient Greek inscription was found on a 1,500-year-old
mosaic floor near the Damascus Gate in the Old City of Jerusalem.
Some experts also believe they have found the lost Roman city of Julias,
formerly the village of Bethsaida, which was the home of Jesus' apostles
Peter, Andrew and Philip.
A paper describing the discovery of the ancient seal that may be linked
to the Prophet Isaiah has been published in the Biblical Archaeology
Review.
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