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Second Temple Era Inscription in Jerusalem

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October 9, 2018 - Jerusalem, Israel - A 2,000 year old stone column drum, Second Temple Period (First Century CE), around the time of Herod the Great's reign, unearthed earlier in 2018 in excavations underway near Binyanei HaUma, Jerusalem's International Convention Center, bears an engraved Aramic inscription reading “Hananiah son of Dudolos from Jerusalem”. Archaeologists share their excitement during a joint press conference of the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Israel Museum stressing this is the first and only Second Temple era artifact which displays the full spelling of Jerusalem, written in Hebrew letters, 'Yerushalayim', as it is spelled today. The archaeological context of the inscription does not allow determination who Hananiah son of Dudolos was, but it is likely that he was an artist potter, the son of an artist potter, who adopted a name from the Greek mythological realm, following Daedalus, the infamous artist. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon/ZUMA Wire)

Filename
20181009_zap_a126_001.jpg
Copyright
Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc. The Mega Agency/RealTime Images
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6000x4000 / 2.3MB
www.zumapress.com
Aramic Binyanei Hauma Dudolos Hananiah Hebrew History IAA ICC International Conference Center International Convention Center Israel Israel Antiquities Authority Israel museum Jerusalem Middle East Yerushalayim ancient archaeological archaeology artifact column discovered discovery excavated excavation find finds historical inscription stone unearthed zselect zcontractphotographer 201810098957Archaeology.jpg zwire zlast24 zadvisory 20181009_zap_a126_001.jpg 20181009_zap_a126_001.jpg
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Daily Round Up - 11 OCt 2018
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October 9, 2018 - Jerusalem, Israel - A 2,000 year old stone column drum, Second Temple Period (First Century CE), around the time of Herod the Great's reign, unearthed earlier in 2018 in excavations underway near Binyanei HaUma, Jerusalem's International Convention Center, bears an engraved Aramic inscription reading “Hananiah son of Dudolos from Jerusalem”. Archaeologists share their excitement during a joint press conference of the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Israel Museum stressing this is the first and only Second Temple era artifact which displays the full spelling of Jerusalem, written in Hebrew letters, 'Yerushalayim', as it is spelled today. The archaeological context of the inscription does not allow determination who Hananiah son of Dudolos was, but it is likely that he was an artist potter, the son of an artist potter, who adopted a name from the Greek mythological realm, following Daedalus, the infamous artist. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon/ZUMA Wire)