Israeli archaeologists uncovered a unique piece of pottery that links the Jerusalem of 2,000 years ago to the Jerusalem of today.
While conducting a pre-construction dig last winter in preparation for a new road, the team of archaeologists unearthed a pillar that was inscribed in Hebrew near the entrance to Jerusalem.
The Hebrew inscription was the first of its kind to be discovered from its time period around the age of Herod the Great, marking it as the oldest inscription ever found using the modern Hebrew spelling and pronunciation of “Jerusalem.”
The pillar is now being displayed in Israel Museum’s Second Temple gallery as a part of a new exhibit which features unique artifacts from the capital and is the oldest artifact from the time of Jesus in the exhibit.
The inscription reads, Hananiah bar Dodalos m’Yerushalayim – Hananiah, the son of Dodalos, from Jerusalem.
Dudi Mevorach, senior curator of Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine Archaeology at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem told CBN that this was a remarkable discovery. He said, “Jerusalem surprisingly for us is inscribed the same way we write it today and the same way we pronounce it today: Yerushalayim.”
He continued, “It’s the first time we have an inscription of this sort from 2,000 years ago, from the times of the Second Temple Period.”
According to CBN News, Mevorach has seen the…
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