Ancient seal suggests Jezebel conducted business separate of her husband
By Heather Whipps
Jezebel, the queen whose name became synonymous with all things lewd
and wicked, probably wielded a fair bit of power in ancient Israel,
suggests a stone document seal newly traced to the Biblical "bad girl."
Originally discovered in Israel in 1964, the intricate seal was
suspected all along to belong to Queen Jezebel, but confusion over the
letters engraved on the stone left some uncertainty. Recently, closer
scrutiny of the seal's engraving revealed markings characteristic of
royal objects.
"The lion-sphinx with female head and female Isis-Hathor crown, which
is unique, this clearly points to a queen," said Marjo Korpel, an Old
Testament scholar at the University of Utrecht who conducted the
research.
The seal confirms that Jezebel, who eventually met a gory demise, was a
powerful figure in the ancient world who conducted business independent
of her husband.
Complete results of the University of Utrecht study are published in a
recent volume of the Journal for Semitics.
Royal symbols borrowed from Egypt
Jezebel, whose life in the 9th century B.C. is chronicled in the Bible,
was married to King Ahab of Israel. As a Phoenician, the Queen was
considered pagan and attempted to sway the people of Israel to abandon
their God and accept her chief deity Baal, partly through forging her
husband's seal on documents, according to the scriptures.
The Bible says nothing of her own seal, but archaeologists have long
believed that the stone discovered in 1964 was Jezebel's, despite the
ambiguity of the symbols and the name depicted on it.
Multiple icons on the seal, as well as its above-average size, indicate
that it belonged to a queen, the recent investigations concluded.
"The lotus (below the Horus falcon) was a symbol of gender definition
and refers to a female owner," Korpel told LiveScience, "[while] the
winged sun disk was a well-known symbol of royalty in and outside
Israel."
Other symbols on the seal also reinforce the connection to a monarch,
such as the Horus and double-cobra, a figure probably adopted from
Egypt, she said.
A misspelling of the name "yzbl"—the queen's moniker in ancient
Hebrew—also had archaeologists confused. However, by comparing the seal
to similar examples from the time, Korpel found that an upper edge that
had broken off likely contained the two missing letters that would have
correctly spelled Jezebel's name.
Pagan queen had power
With her own seal, Queen Jezebel was able to exert a powerful influence
upon people around her, much like the Egyptian queens, Korpel said.
"The biblical texts already prove that she was a powerful woman. The
queens in Egypt ... all have in common their prominent roles in
religion, politics and representational art, and their status as
principal wife. This also seems to count for Queen Jezebel," said
Korpel.
Unlike Egypt, however, Biblical Israel did not look favorably upon
powerful women. Jezebel was ultimately perceived as a threat and
foreign idol worshipper, accused of prostitution, murder and sorcery,
and tossed from her window to be ravaged by dogs.
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