A Is for Ancient, Describing an Alphabet Found Near Jerusalem
Published: November 9, 2005
By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD
© The New York Times
Click for original article
Letters on a stone found near Tel Zayit resemble Phoenician.
Archaeologists digging in July at the site, Tel Zayit, found the
inscribed stone in the wall of an ancient building. After an analysis
of the layers of ruins, the discoverers concluded that this was the
earliest known specimen of the Hebrew alphabet and an important
benchmark in the history of writing, they said this week.
If they are right, the stone bears the oldest reliably dated example of
an abecedary - the letters of the alphabet written out in their
traditional sequence. Several scholars who have examined the
inscription tend to support that view.
Experts in ancient writing said the find showed that at this stage the
Hebrew alphabet was still in transition from its Phoenician roots, but
recognizably Hebrew. The Phoenicians lived on the coast north of
Israel, in today's Lebanon, and are considered the originators of
alphabetic writing, several centuries earlier.
The discovery of the stone will be reported in detail next week in
Philadelphia, but was described in interviews with Ron E. Tappy, the
archaeologist at the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary who directed the
dig.
"All successive alphabets in the ancient world, including the Greek one, derive from this ancestor at Tel Zayit," he said.
The research is supported by an anonymous donor to the seminary, which
has a long history in archaeological field work. The project is also
associated with the American Schools of Oriental Research and the W. F.
Albright Institute for Archaeological Research, in Jerusalem.
Frank Moore Cross Jr., a Harvard expert on early Hebrew inscriptions
who was not involved in the research, said the inscription "is a very
early Hebrew alphabet, maybe the earliest, and the letters I have
studied are what I would expect to find in the 10th century" before
Christ.
P. Kyle McCarter Jr., an authority on ancient Middle Eastern writing at
Johns Hopkins University, was more cautious, describing the inscription
as "a Phoenician type of alphabet that is being adapted." But he added,
"I do believe it is proto-Hebrew, but I can't prove it for certain."
Lawrence E. Stager, an archaeologist at Harvard engaged in other
excavations in Israel, said the pottery styles at the site "fit
perfectly with the 10th century, which makes this an exceedingly rare
inscription." But he added that more extensive radiocarbon dating would
be needed to establish the site's chronology.
The Tel Zayit stone was uncovered at an eight-acre site in the region
of ancient Judah, south of Jerusalem, and 18 miles inland from
Ashkelon, an ancient Philistine port.
The two lines of incised letters, apparently the 22 symbols of the
Hebrew alphabet, were on one face of the 40-pound stone. A bowl-shaped
hollow was carved in the other side, suggesting that the stone had been
a drinking vessel for cult rituals, Dr. Tappy said. The stone, he
added, may have been embedded in the wall because of a belief in the
alphabet's power to ward off evil.
In a study of the alphabet, Dr. McCarter noted that the
Phoenician-based letters were "beginning to show their own
characteristics." The Phoenician symbol for what is the equivalent of a
K is a three-stroke trident; in the transitional inscription, the right
stroke is elongated, beginning to look like a backward K.
Another baffling peculiarity is that in four cases the letters are reversed in sequence; an F, for example, comes before an E.
The inscription was found in the context of a substantial network of
buildings at the site, which led Dr. Tappy to propose that Tel Zayit
was probably an important border town established by an expanding
Israelite kingdom based in Jerusalem.
A border town of such size and culture, Dr. Tappy said, suggested a
centralized bureaucracy, political leadership and literacy levels that
seemed to support the biblical image of the unified kingdom of David
and Solomon in the 10th century B.C.
"That puts us right in the middle of the squabble over whether anything
important happened in Israel in that century," Dr. Stager said.
A vocal minority of scholars contend that the Bible's picture of the
10th century B.C. as a golden age in Israelite history is
insupportable. Some archaeological evidence, they say, suggests that
David and Solomon were little more than tribal chieftains and that it
was another century before a true political state emerged.
Dr. Tappy acknowledged that he was inviting controversy by his
interpretation of the Tel Zayit stone and other artifacts as evidence
of a fairly advanced political system 3,000 years ago. Critics who may
accept the date and description of the inscription are expected to
challenge him when he reports on the findings next week in Philadelphia
at meetings of the American Schools of Oriental Research and the
Society of Biblical Literature.
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