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Zayit Stone

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The Zayit Stone is a 38-pound limestone boulder excavated from Tel Zayit (Zeitah) in southwest Israel (the Beth Guvrin Valley about 35 miles from Jerusalem), territory belonging to the kingdom of Judah, with an incised Paleo-Hebrew abecedary (19 letters carved in the first line; 3 in the second line with 2 terminating symbols) and remnants of several other inscriptions (3 words plus 2 pairs of terminating symbols):

Top/bowl side--the relationship between these 2 inscriptions and the terminators are speculative:

||      כס

||      עזר

Bottom side--the relationship between these 3 lines of inscriptions are relatively accurate:

ילכמנספעצwאבגדוהחזט
                || קרש
                     עזר

(Note: The "w" between the Tet and Yod may be an aborted Mem, a misplaced Shin, or a random scribbling.)

Excavations under the direction of R.E. Tappy have been conducted at Tel Zayit during 1999-2001 and 2005. A volunteer excavator, Dan Rypma, discovered the stone on July 15, 2005. It is an important Biblical archaeology artifact for several reasons:

The side opposite the inscription has a bowl-shaped hollow depression. Its placement in a wall, and the context of its inscriptions ("help/warrior" and "bowl/throne") may indicate a belief that the letters possessed magical/apotropaic power to ward off evil spirits.

References

 


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