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Amazing discovery in heart of biblical
Jerusalem
Debate
about monumental 10th century structure in
Jerusalem
Findings yield clues to age of building
but also fuel debate. The fact that the wall
is on bedrock and not on other ruins
supports the idea that it may be the
foundation of King David's palace.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002661466_jerusalemside03.html?syndication=rss
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/12/01/AR2005120101944.html?nav=rss_nation/science
http://www.clevelandjewishnews.com/articles/2005/12/01/news/israel/ujerusalem1202.txt
http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/Mazar.pdf
In what many
archaeologists hail as the potential find of
the century, remains of a massive structure
dating to the time of King David have been
discovered in the heart of biblical
Jerusalem.
Eilat Mazar, the Israeli archaeologist
leading the excavation, has suggested that
it may, in fact, be the palace built by
David as described in the Bible.
The discovery has shaken the already
contentious field of biblical archaeology to
its roots: For the last few years, a number
of respected archaeologists n most
prominently Israel Finkelstein, chairman of
Tel Aviv University's archaeology department
and author of the 2001 best-seller The Bible
Unearthed have argued that the biblical
accounts of Jerusalem as the seat of a great
and united monarchy under the rule of David
and Solomon are false. If Mazar's hypothesis
proves right, it would go a long way toward
proving Finkelstein and the others wrong.
Her findings will also doubtlessly affect
the broader political battle over Jerusalem
that is, the question of whether the Jewish
people has its origins in the city and thus
has a special hold over it, or whether the
concept of a Jewish origin in Jerusalem is
nothing but a myth.
With such a potentially powerful find, there
will naturally be no shortage of skeptics,
whether for reasons of politics or
scholarship. Yet there are many good reasons
to identify Mazar's find, at least
provisionally, as the palace described in
the Book of Samuel. These reasons deserve to
be heard.
According to archaeological evidence,
Jerusalem was founded two millennia before
David arrived on the scene in 1000 B.C.E.
Because of its unique topography n a high
hill nestled between two deep valleys that
converge at its southern point, graced with
abundant sources of water and exposed to
attack only along a ridge from the north n
the location proved ideal for the capital of
a kingdom.
Therefore, David did not destroy the city
when he conquered it from the Jebusites, but
rather added to it. The most notable
addition was the palace built by the
Phoenician king, Hiram of Tyre, as a gesture
of friendship.
Based on the biblical account, coupled with
textual clues as to the topography and
findings previously published by Kathleen
Kenyon, 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
archaeologists always try to test their
theories n by excavation." In early 2005,
with the support of the Jerusalem-based
Shalem Center, the City of David Foundation,
and Hebrew University, Mazar did just that.
The evidence she found is remarkable: A
section of a massive wall, which runs about
100 feet from west to east before making a
right-angle turn heading south, implies the
existence of a very large building. Other
findings include pottery shards, discovered
in the dirt fill between the stones of the
wall, which were dated to the 11th century
B.C.E., the earliest possible date of the
building's construction.
Additionally, the building is positioned
directly on bedrock along the city's
northern edge with no archaeological layers
beneath it. This implies that the structure,
built two millennia after the city's
founding, constituted a new, northward
expansion of the city's limits, as described
in the biblical account. It is located at
what was then the very summit of the
mountain - a reasonable place for the palace
from which David is said, in II Samuel
(5:17), to have "descended."
Finally, Mazar discovered a remarkable clay
bulla, or signet impression, bearing the
name of Yehuchal Ben Shelemiah, a Judean
prince from the time of King Zedekiah
mentioned by name in Jeremiah 37:3. This
evidence suggests that four centuries after
David, the site was still an important seat
of Judean royalty. This matches the biblical
account of the palace being in continuous
use from its construction until the
destruction of Judea by the Babylonians in
586 B.C.E.
The evidence seems to agree surprisingly
well with Mazar's claim that this could be
David's palace. The location, size, style,
and dating of the building all match the
textual description. Moreover, there are no
finds that suggest the contrary, such as the
idolatrous statuettes or ritual crematoria
found in contemporary Phoenician
settlements. Furthermore, the building
appears in an ancient world where such
constructions were extremely rare and
represented the greatest sort of public
works. Finally, the evidence fits well with
previous archaeological finds from the site.
Naturally, many archaeologists, having been
trained in a scholarly world wary of
religious enthusiasts, will be extremely
reluctant to identify any new archaeological
find with particulars found in the Bible.
Others, driven by a combination 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 undermine
the proposition that this was David's
palace: They will either raise the bar of
required proofs to a standard that no
archaeological find could ever meet, or they
will simply dismiss it all as wishful
thinking in the service of religious or
Zionist motives.
Yet even if this is not in fact David's
palace, there is no doubt that we are
talking about an archaeological find of
revolutionary proportions. It is still the
first discovery of a major construction from
the early Israelite period in Jerusalem.
No longer is it reasonable to claim, as many
revisionist archaeologists have done, that
the absence of evidence from the relevant
period shows that the great unified monarchy
of David and Solomon was really an imaginary
historiosophic creation. It is thus
significant that the normally reserved
Amihai Mazar, cousin of Malat Mazar and 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."
Furthermore, so long as we are willing to
admit that possible future evidence may
prompt a different conclusion, there is no
reason not to identify this building as
David's palace. Put simply, we have before
us two things: A biblical text describing in
detail the creation of a Phoenician-style
palace by David on a particular mountain
around the end of the eleventh or beginning
of the tenth century B.C.E.; and a grand
Phoenician style structure dating from the
same time on the summit of that very
mountain, located with assistance from the
text and previous archaeological
discoveries.
Is this absolute proof? No. But surely it is
enough to shift the burden of proof. For in
the end, the theory that this is David's
palace is thus far the best explanation for
the data. As Mazar herself says, "Anyone who
wants to say otherwise ought to come up with
a better theory."
This is neither wishful thinking nor an
imagined past. It's good science.
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