The dome of the rock located on the Temple Mount site in Jerusalem.
The discovery of 3,000-year-old manure in Israel's Timna Valley could provide clues about the biblical King Solomon and his 10 century B.C. quest to build the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, archaeologists have said.
The discovery of 3,000-year-old manure in Israel's Timna Valley could provide clues about the biblical King Solomon and his 10 century B.C. quest to build the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, archaeologists have said.
The History Channel reported
on Monday that archaeologists from the University of Tel Aviv began excavating
the site of a mining camp in 2013, and in 2014 made several important
discoveries, such as the remains of walled structures and fortified gates.
The team also found animal manure, and
although at first they did not realize the significance of it, radiocarbon
dating results revealed that the dung came from donkeys and other livestock in
the 10th century B.C.
As National Geographic reports,
what is remarkable about the find is that the manure suggests significant
activity was taking place at the site at a time when King Solomon is believed
to have been building the Holy Temple.
"According to the Hebrew Bible,
King Solomon was renowned for his great wisdom and wealth, and his many
building projects included a temple in Jerusalem lavishly appointed with gold
and bronze objects," National Geographic described.
"Such a structure would have
required large amounts of metal from industrial-scale mining operations
somewhere in the Middle East, but the scriptures are silent as to their
location."
King Solomon remains a mysterious
figure, with the biblical books of Kings I and Chronicles II stating that he
succeeded his father as king of Israel around 970 B.C. Solomon is said to have
had "great wisdom," tremendous wealth, and numerous wives.
Solomon set out to build a large
temple in Jerusalem filled with gold and bronze, and although some historians
have doubted his existence, the discovery of the ancient manure at the mining
camp now shows that large-scale operations, perhaps to build such a temple,
were taking place at the time.
In total, researchers have found over
1,000 tons of smelting debris at the site, which also suggests production on an
industrial scale was taking place there.
While there is no direct evidence yet
to link the mining operations at Timna Valley to King Solomon, findings in the Journal
of Archaeological Science: Reports suggests that a complex society
lived at the location.
The archaeologists suggested that the
Edomites, Israel's sworn enemies, could have lived there, with biblical
accounts showing that King David marched his armies into the desert to conquer
them.
Erez Ben-Yosef of the University of
Tel Aviv said the fortified walls previously discovered at the smelting camp
strongly suggests it was indeed a military target at the time.
King David could have demanded tribute
after defeating the Edomites, the research team leader speculated.
"There's a serious possibility
that Jerusalem got its wealth from taxing these mining operations," he
said.
"Until recently we had almost
nothing from this period in this area," Ben-Yosef continued. "But now
we not only know that this was a source of copper, but also that it's from the
days of King David and his son Solomon."
Other discoveries near Jerusalem's
Temple Mount in recent years from the time of King David and King Solomon have
sometimes puzzled archaeologists.
Professor Shmuel Ahituv from
Ben-Gurion University said in July 2013 that a ceramic jar, with Canaanite
language inscriptions believed to be from the 10th Century B.C., dated back to
the earliest alphabetical written text ever found in Jerusalem.
Hebrew University researchers at the
time said that the combination of letters does not correspond to any known word
in west-Semitic languages, however, leaving the meaning of the inscriptions a
mystery.
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