By Lulu Morris 03 August 2017
An excavation at The City of David in Jerusalem has unearthed an ancient biblical story.
Archaeologists at the site have exhumed burnt artefacts dated 2,600
years ago. The discovery of the artefacts solidifies the passage in the
bible, where Jerusalem is burnt down by the Babylonians around 587 BC.
Researchers found burnt pieces of wood, grape seeds, burnt pottery and
bone all concealed by layers of ash. The burning of Jerusalem was
described in the Old Testament in the book of Jeremiah.
"Now on the seventh day of the fifth month, which was the nineteenth year of King Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, Nebuzaradan the captain of the guard, a
servant of the king of Babylon, came to Jerusalem. He burned the house
of the Lord, the king's house, and all the houses of Jerusalem; even
every great house he burned with fire."
The archaeologists from the Israel Antiquities Authority were looking
under layers of rock in the eastern area of the City of David when they
found the artefacts. Alongside the burnt remains found were storage
jars, many bearing stamped handles and rosette seals. The seals were the
driving evidence that led the researchers to date the artefacts at
2,600 years. Dr Joel Uziel, the leader of the excavation, explains
“These seals are characteristic of the end of the First Temple Period,
[They] were used for the administrative system that developed towards
the end of the Judean dynasty."
Find ing the burnt pottery and artefacts in the dig site corroborate
Jeremiah’s testament, though perhaps not to the extent he described it,
but Jerusalem was at one point, during 587BC burnt to the ground by
Babylonian invaders 2,600 years ago. National Geographic
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