Search This Blog Post
Tuesday, 12 July 2016
Ancient philistine cemetery in Israel could solve one of the Bible’s biggest mysteries
Guess what? one of the Bible’s deepest and most important mysteries may be
about to be solved.
The scientists have said that the
members of the Biblical nation didn’t appear to be “philistines” – finding the
people buried alongside jewellery and perfumed oil. They will now conduct
further tests that could shed yet more light on the maligned people.
Those discoveries might be enough to
make us rethink today’s use of the word philistine, which tends to refer to
uncultured people who don’t know enough about the arts.
"The Philistines have had some bad
press, and this will dispel a lot of myths," said Lawrence Stager, an
architect who has led the expedition that found the cemetery since 1985.
Until now, most of our understanding of
the Philistines came from the things that they have left behind. But now for
the first time we have found their remains.
"After decades of studying what
Philistines left behind, we have finally come face to face with the people
themselves," said Daniel M. Master, professor of archaeology at Wheaton
College and one of the leaders of the excavation. "With this discovery we
are close to unlocking the secrets of their origins."
The discovery was finally unveiled
Sunday at the close of a 30-year excavation by the Leon Levy Expedition, a team
of archaeologists from Harvard University, Boston College, Wheaton College in
Illinois and Troy University in Alabama.
The archaeologists kept the discovery a
secret for three years until the end of their dig because of a unique hazard of
archaeology in modern-day Israel: they did not want to attract ultra-Orthodox
Jewish protesters, according to Mr Master "he said.
"We had to bite our tongues for a
long time.
In the past, the ultra-Orthodox have
staged demonstrations at excavations where human remains are found, arguing
that the remains could be Jewish and that disturbing them would violate a
religious prohibition.
Mr Stager's team dug down about 3
metres (10 feet) to uncover the cemetery, which they found to have been used
centuries later as a Roman vineyard.
Decorated juglets believed to have
contained perfumed oil were found in graves. Some bodies were still wearing
bracelets and earrings. Others had weapons.
The archeologists also discovered some
cremations, which the team say were rare and expensive for the period, and some
larger jugs contained the bones of infants.
"The cosmopolitan life here is so
much more elegant and worldly and connected with other parts of the eastern
Mediterranean," Stager said, adding that this was in contrast to the more
modest village lifestyle of the Israelites who lived in the hills to the east.
Archaeologists and biblical scholars
have long believed the Philistines came from the Aegean region, based on
pottery found in excavations of Philistine sites.
But scholars have debated where exactly
in the Aegean region the Philistines came from: mainland Greece, the islands of
Crete or Cyprus, or even Anatolia, in modern-day Turkey.
The bones might hold the answers, said
archaeologist Yossi Garfinkel, an Israeli expert on the period who did not
participate in the dig. He called the cemetery find "a very significant
discovery indeed."
The excavation of the cemetery has also
shed light on Philistine burial practices.
The Philistines buried their dead with
perfume bottles, placed near the face. Near the legs were jars that likely held
oil, wine or food. In some cases, archaeologists found the dead were buried
wearing necklaces, bracelets, earrings, and even toe rings. Some were buried
with their weapons.
"This is how Philistines treated
their dead, and it's the code book to decoding everything," said
archaeologist Adam Aja, a participant in the dig.
Finds from the cemetery went on display
Sunday in an Israel Museum exhibition held at the Rockefeller Archaeological
Museum in Jerusalem
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment