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Illustrating biblical history
Archaeological discoveries
offer insights and interesting illustrations of some key
events in biblical history. Here are just a few.
1. Tomb of Rekh-mi-re
(15th century B.C.) A wall
painting in an Egyptian tomb in the Valley of the Nobles at
Thebes shows foreign slaves making mud bricks, recalling the
enslaved Israelites’ forced brickmaking (Exodus 1:14:5:7).
2. Israel Stele
(13th century B.C.) The name
Israel is inscribed in hieroglyphs on a stone slab found in
1896 at Thebes. It is the only mention of Israel in all
Egyptian records discovered so far, and the oldest evidence
outside the Bible fo r
Israel’s existence. Israel is listed as one of the peoples
in western Asia during the reign of Ramses II’s son,
Merneptah (c.1213-1203 B.C.), offering evidence that the
Israelites were already settled in Canaan (the Promised Land)
by that time.
3. House of David Inscription
(ninth century B.C.) A
stone tablet discovered in 1993 provides the first mention
outsi de
the Bible of the House of David. See main article for
details.
4. Moabite
Stone (ninth century B.C.)
An inscribed basalt monument erected by Mesha, king of Moab,
tells of the revolt of the Moabites after the death of King
Ahab of Israel. It gives Mesha’s side of the story recorded
in 2 Kings 3.

5.The Black Obelisk
(ninth century B.C.) A monument
found in the imperial palace at Nimrud depicts Assyria’s
King Shalmaneser III receiving tribute from kings and
vassals, including Israel’s King Jehu.
6. T he
Siloam Inscription (eighth century B.C.) An inscription carved in the rock wall
of Hezekiah’s tunnel by a Jewish workman describes the
construction of the underground
conduit. The tunnel brought vital stores of water from Gihon
Spring to the Pool of Siloam within Jerusalem’s city walls
during the Assyrian siege of 701 B.C. (2 Kings 20:20); 2
Chronicles 32:30).
7. Sennacherib’s Prism
(seventh century B.C.) A six-sided prism discovered in
Nineveh and inscribes with Sennacherib’s own account of his
siege of Jerusalem in 701 B.C., which made He zekiah
a prisoner in his own royal city (2 Kings 19). It is often
called the "Taylor Prism" after its first owner.
8. Nebuchadnezzar Chronicle
(sixth century B.C.) A Babylonian account of the siege of
Jerusalem in 597 B.C., the appointment of Zedekiah as puppet
ruler of Judah, and the Jews’ exile to Babylon (2 Kings 24).
9.
Lachish Letters
(sixth century B.C.) Twenty-one military communiques,
written on pottery fragments (as documents often were)
during Nebuchadnezzar’s siege of Lachish (Jeremiah 34:6-7).
They provide strong corroborative evidence for the
historicity of the captivity and exile.
10. Nabonidus Cylinder
(sixth century B.C.) A clay
cylinder names Belshazzar (Daniel 5:29-30) as son of
Babylonian King Nabonidus. See main text for details.
11.
Cyrus Cylinder (sixth
century B.C.) A 9-inch-long clay cylinder, discovered at
Babylon in 1879, records the city’s conquest in 539 B.C. by
Persia’s King Cyrus the Great (Daniel 5:30; 6:28). Cyrus
took the city by surprise, without a battle. Cyrus also
describes his new religious policy of toleration, which
allowed captive Jews to return home (Ezra 1:1-3).
12.
Dead Sea Scrolls (third
century B.C. to first century A.D.) Several hundred ancient
manuscripts found in Judean wilderness caves near the Dead
Sea beginning in 1947. The oldest extant manuscripts of the
Old Testament, they include portions of every book of the
Hebrew Bible except Esther. The Dead Sea Scrolls point to
the high degree of accuracy in the transmission of the Old
Testament text and provide important information on Jewish
history during the time between the Old and New Testaments.
13.
Pilate Inscription
(first century A. D.) A battered limestone slab found at
Caesarea is the only known inscription from his lifetime
naming Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor of Judea who
ordered the crucifixion of Jesus. Part of Pilate’s name can
be seen on the second line. The stone had been part of a
building dedicated in honor of the Emperor Tiberius.
14.
Skeletal remains of crucified man
(first century A.D.) A crucifixion
victim found in 1968 in a tomb at Giv’at ha-Mivtar,
northeast of Jerusalem, provides the first authenticated
physical evidence of a crucifixion in biblical times. The
left heel bone was still fixed by a nail. An inscription
names the victim as Yehohanan (John), a Jewish male about 25
years old who was executed around the mid-first century A.D.
15. Gallio Inscription
(first century A.D.) An inscription from Delphi in Greece,
dates to A.D. 52, names Lucius Junius Gallio as proconsul of
Achaia. The apostle Paul was brought before Gallio by his
Jewish accusers during his first visit to Corinth (Acts
18:12).
16. Rylands
Papyrus (about A.D. 130) A fragment of John’s Gospel,
discovered in Egypt, contains verses from chapter 18. It is
the earliest surviving copy of a New Testament book and is
now in the John Rylands Library in Manchester, England. |