The Jerusalem Post

Cuneiform discovery reveals Babylonian slave trade in Samaria

- • By RACHEL BERNSTEIN

A cuneiform fragment discovered at Tel Mikhmoret on the Mediterran­ean coast north of Netanya suggests Babylonian­s were living in Samaria in the 6th century BCE. The Akkadian text, studied by Prof. Ira Spar, Prof. Samuel M. Paley and Prof. Robert R. Stieglitz, was published in the current edition of the Israel Exploratio­n Journal. Stieglitz and Paley were involved in ongoing excavation­s at the site between 1979 and 1992.

The cuneiform tablet documentin­g a slave sale refers to a pym weight, a polished stone weighing about 7.6 grams. Since these stones were in common use in biblical Israel but not in ancient Mesopotami­a, Spar, Paley and Stieglitz concluded the text was written in the Levant, and reflected a business transactio­n regarding moveable property, namely slaves, in the biblical kingdom of Israel.

That kingdom, one of two successor states to the United Kingdom of Israel and Judah, was founded around 930 BCE. The “Northern Kingdom,” also called the Kingdom of Samaria to differenti­ate it from the Southern Kingdom of Judah based in Jerusalem, fell to the Assyrians, presumably under King Shalmanese­r V, who died while besieging the region in 722 BCE.

While the presence of Babylonian­s in the region has been assumed by many scholars, archaeolog­ical evidence attesting to their presence has remained scant.

The pym weight reference in the cuneiform correspond­ed with mentions of the weight designatio­n in other texts, including the Bible. In Samuel 13:21, the text described how the Philistine­s would not allow for blacksmith­s in the land of Israel, and Israelites were dependent on Philistine­s to have agricultur­e equipment made and sharpened. The price described for such service is described as a pym, or two-thirds of a shekel. Pym weights measure about 15 mm. in diameter, and are often inscribed with Phoenician letters.

Tel Mikhmoret and its neighborin­g sites served as a port city during the late Bronze era (1550 BCE to 1200 BCE). Archaeolog­ical remains reflect the developmen­t of sea trade on the Mediterran­ean Basin, which began during the Middle Bronze age (2000 BCE to 1500 BCE), and reached a peak during the late Bronze era.

While much of the population of the Northern Kingdom was deported by Assyria and a new population sent to replace the so-called Ten Lost Tribes, the conquerors encouraged agricultur­al activity to continue in the area’s many unfortifie­d villages. Tel Mikhmoret remained settled into the Hellenisti­c period (332 BCE to 37 BCE), and onward through the Roman and Byzantine eras (32 BCE until 638 CE).

 ?? (Baz Ratner/Reuters) ?? CUNEIFORM TABLETS from Babylon 2,500 years ago, at the Bible Lands Museum in 2015.
(Baz Ratner/Reuters) CUNEIFORM TABLETS from Babylon 2,500 years ago, at the Bible Lands Museum in 2015.

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