Facts on the ground: Jerusalem’s Jewish history
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Editorial

Facts on the ground: Jerusalem’s Jewish history

The ancient seal inscribed with Nathan-Melech’s name that was discovered in the City of David. (Eliyahu Yanai/City of David)
The ancient seal inscribed with Nathan-Melech’s name that was discovered in the City of David. (Eliyahu Yanai/City of David)

2,600-year-old clay seal, about a half-inch across, may prove to be another weapon in the contemporary debate over the status of Jerusalem.

The bulla, which bound documents together, contains a few etched lines
in paleo-Hebrew that contain the name of Nathan-Melech, “servant to the king,” who served as an aide to King Josiah. (“And [the king] took away the horses that the kings of Judah had given to the sun, at the entrance of the house of God, by the chamber of Nathan-Melech the officer, who was in the precincts; and he burned the chariots of the sun with fire.”
[II Kings 23:11])

The one-centimeter artifact, the first burnt-clay impression that offers evidence on which Nathan-Melech’s name appears, was discovered a half-year ago during archaeological excavations in the Givati Parking Lot on the western slope of Jerusalem’s City of David, near the Old City. Announced recently, the find serves as tactile proof of the Jewish claim to an ongoing presence in Judaism’s holiest city.

The Jewish connection to Jerusalem has been the subject in recent decades of political-historical-religious debate, escalating after Israel took control of all of Jerusalem in the 1967 Six-Day War. In the context of ongoing Israeli-Palestinian disputes, Muslim scholars, supported by United Nations bodies and other opponents of Israel, rigorously deny any Jewish claim on Jerusalem or any part of the Holy Land. They discount biblical accounts of Jewish settlement in rule over the Promised Land.

The inscription is “not just another discovery,” archaeologist Yiftah Shalev of the Israel Antiquities Authority said. Such artifacts, he said, “paint a much larger picture of the era in Jerusalem. What is important is not just that they were found in Jerusalem, but [that they were found] inside their true archaeological context.”

The seal was found, in the remains of a First Temple structure — on an
11-acre site that had become the capital’s administrative center — that probably was destroyed during the Babylonian conquest of the city in
586 BCE.

The find, according to Doron Spielman, president of the City of David Foundation, is part of excavations there that “prove that ancient Jerusalem is no longer just a matter of faith, but also a matter of fact.”

Israelis have alleged that Islamic authorities in the Old City frequently destroy historic artifacts that would reinforce Jewish claims to an ancient presence in Jerusalem.

One clay seal will not end the debate, but it is strong ammunition against modern enemies of Israel who would deny the Jewish people’s ancient roots in their land.

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