[Dr. Aaron Lerner - IMRA: “The finds [AL: AFTER BEING SMASHED BY HEAVY
EQUIPMENT BEING OPERATED BY PALESTINIANS] include fragments of bowl rims,
bases and body sherds; the base of a juglet used for the ladling of oil; the
handle of a small juglet and the rim of a storage jar. The bowl sherds were
decorated with wheel burnishing lines characteristic of the First Temple
Period. In addition, a piece of a white washed handmade object was found.
It may have been used to decorate a larger object or may have been part of a
figurine.”
We will never know what bowls, jugs and other objects from the First Temple
waited over 2,600 years to be revealed only to be smashed by Palestinians
determined to erase any memory of the Jewish presence on the Temple Mount -
essentially aided and abetted by an Israeli Government that lacks the will
to protect the Jewish People’s interests at this holiest of sites.]
Israel Antiquities Authority October 18, 2007
For the First Time, Archaeological Remains dated to the First Temple Period
have been Discovered on the Temple Mount
Archaeological Inspection by the Israel Antiquities Authority over Works of
the Waqf has Uncovered Remnants of the First Temple Period (Iron Age IIB)
During a recent archaeological inspection of the Temple Mount, carried out
by the Israel Antiquities Authority on the maintenance work of the Waqf, an
apparently sealed archaeological level dated to the First Temple Period was
exposed in the area close to the south-eastern corner of the raised platform
surrounding the Dome of the Rock. Archaeological examination of a small
section of this level, undertaken by Yuval Baruch, the Jerusalem District
Archaeologist, uncovered finds that included fragments of ceramic table
wares and animal bones. The finds are dated from the eighth to the sixth
centuries BCE.
Yuval Baruch of the IAA, Prof. Sy Gitin, Director of the W. F. Albright
Institute of Archaeological Research in Jerusalem, Prof. Israel Finkelstein
of Tel Aviv University and Prof. Ronny Reich of Haifa University examined
the finds and the archaeological data and reached the conclusion that the
characteristics and location of the finds may aid scholars in reconstructing
the dimensions and boundaries of the Temple Mount during the First Temple
Period.
The finds include fragments of bowl rims, bases and body sherds; the base of
a juglet used for the ladling of oil; the handle of a small juglet and the
rim of a storage jar. The bowl sherds were decorated with wheel burnishing
lines characteristic of the First Temple Period. In addition, a piece of a
white washed handmade object was found. It may have been used to decorate a
larger object or may have been part of a figurine.
An archaeological seminar concerning these finds and their archaeological
interpretation will be organized by the Israel Antiquities Authority.
This entry was posted
on Monday, October 22nd, 2007 and is filed under news.
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