By REGAN E. DOHERTY,
A biblical wall that has eluded archaeologists for years has finally
been found, according to an Israeli scholar. A team of archaeologists
in Jerusalem has uncovered what they believe to be part of a wall
mentioned in the Bible's Book of Nehemiah.
The discovery, made in Jerusalem's ancient City of David, came as a
result of a rescue attempt on a tower which was in danger of collapse,
said Eilat Mazar, head of the Institute of Archaeology at the Shalem
Center, a Jerusalem-based research and educational institute, and
leader of the dig.
Artifacts including pottery shards and arrowheads found under the tower
suggested that both the tower and the nearby wall are from the 5th
century B.C., the time of Nehemiah, according to Mazar. Scholars
previously thought the wall dated to the Hasmonean period (142-37 B.C.).
The findings suggest that the wall is actually part of the same city
wall the Bible says Nehemiah rebuilt, Mazar said. The Book of Nehemiah
(chapters 3-6) gives a detailed description of construction of the
walls, destroyed earlier by the Babylonians.
"We were amazed," she said, noting that the discovery was made at a
time when many scholars argued that the wall did not exist.
"This was a great surprise. It was something we didn't plan," Mazar
said.
However, another scholar doubted whether the wall was biblical.
The first phase of the dig, completed in 2005, uncovered what Mazar
believes to be the remains of King David's palace, built by King Hiram
of Tyre and also mentioned in the Bible.
Ephraim Stern, professor emeritus of archaeology at Hebrew University
and chairman of the state of Israel archaeological council,
corroborated Mazar's claim. "The material she showed me is from the
Persian period," the period of Nehemiah, he said. "I can sign on the
date of the material she found."
Another scholar disputed the significance of the discovery.
Israel Finkelstein, professor of archaeology at Tel Aviv University,
called the discovery "an interesting find," but said the pottery and
other remains do not indicate that the wall was built in the time of
Nehemiah. Because the debris was not connected to a floor or other
structural part of the wall, the wall could have been built later,
Finkelstein said.
"The wall could have been built, theoretically, in the Ottoman period,"
he said. "It's not later than the pottery — that's all we know."
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