Israel discovers 3,200-year-old temple with trove of artifacts

Source:Xinhua Published: 2020/2/20 19:08:40

A palestinian girl reacts outside her house at a poor neighborhood in southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis, Feb. 10, 2020. Gaza has been placed under a tight Israeli blockade since the Islamic Hamas movement seized the territory by force after routing forces loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas in 2007. The United Nations has repeatedly warned of a humanitarian deterioration in Gaza. In 2019, it issued a report warning that the Gaza Strip will not be suitable for living if Israel continues imposing blockade on the enclave. (Photo by Yasser Qudih/Xinhua)



An Israeli-led archaeological team unearthed in southern Israel a 3,200-year-old Canaanite temple, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HUJI) reported on Monday.

In a study, conducted by researchers from the HUJI and the Southern Adventist University in Tennessee, the US, and published in the journal Levant, the team also unearthed a trove of artifacts in the temple complex.

The extensive temple ruins, dating back to the 12th century BC, were uncovered in Tel Lachish, a large Bronze Age-era settlement near today's Israeli city of Kiryat Gat.

The front of the temple's compound is marked by two columns and two towers leading to a large hall, while the inner sanctum has four supporting columns and several unhewn "standing stones" that may have served as representations of temple gods.

The temple is square in shape and has several side rooms, typical of later temples including Jerusalem's Solomon's Temple, built in the 10th century BC.

The team also found bronze cauldrons, jewelry inspired by Egyptian goddess Hathor, daggers and ax-heads adorned with bird images, scarabs, and a gold-plated bottle inscribed with the name Ramses II, one of Egypt's powerful pharaohs.

In addition, the team found a pottery shard, engraved with ancient Canaanite script with the Hebrew letter "Samekh" which, according to the team, makes it the oldest known example of the letter and a unique specimen for ancient alphabets studies.  



Posted in: CULTURE & LEISURE

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