The Manila Times

A rare and important 2,550-year-old silver coin discovered in Judean Hills

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AN extremely rare silver coin dated to the Persian period (6th–5th centuries BCE) was discovered in an Israel Antiquitie­s Authority excavation at a site in the Judean Hills – rare evidence for the earliest use of coins in the country. The excavation, carried out in the course of infrastruc­ture works undertaken by the Netivei Israel National Transport Infrastruc­ture Company, also exposed a building from the First Temple Period, with even earlier evidence for commerce in the form of a sheqel weight.

The rare coin was discovered by Semyon Gendler, the Acting Judean District Archaeolog­ist of the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority. The coin, found intentiona­lly broken, was minted with a square stamp embedded into one face; later, more sophistica­ted techniques produced coins with protruding rather than sunken stamps.

According to Dr. Robert Kool, head of the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority Numismatic Department, “The coin is extremely rare, joining only half a dozen coins of its type that have been found in archaeolog­ical excavation­s in the country. The coin was minted in a period when the use of coins had just begun. The rare find contribute­s informatio­n concerning the way trade was carried out, and the process whereby global commerce moved from payment by weighing silver pieces, to the use of coins. The coin belongs to a group of very early coins that were minted outside Israel, in the regions of ancient Greece, Cyprus and Turkey. In the 6th–5th centuries BCE, such coins began to appear at sites in the Land of Israel.”

An additional indication of the gradual process is the fact that, although the silver coin was minted as a coin, it was found intentiona­lly cut into two. This indicates that in the 4th century BCE, it was used as a weighed piece of silver, rather than as a coin, even though coins were current in this period.

According to Michal Mermelstei­n and Danny Benayoun, Excavation directors on behalf of the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority, “The site was situated in the rural area of the Kingdom of Judah, whose capital was in Jerusalem. It was first settled in the First Temple period, in the 7th century BCE (2,700 years ago), during the reigns of the kings of Judah, Hezekiah, Manasseh, Amon and Josiah, a peak settlement period in the kingdom of Judah.”

“A characteri­stic ‘four-room house’ was uncovered from this period, and the sheqel weight, found on the floor of one of the rooms in the house, provides early evidence for trade. The dome-shaped stone weight would have been used for weighing metals, spices, and other expensive commoditie­s. The sign on the weight was an ancient Egyptian (hieratic) abbreviati­on for the word sheqel, and the single incised stroke represents one sheqel,” added the archaeolog­ists.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF ISRAEL ANTIQUITIE­S AUTHORITY/ EMIL ALADJEM ?? The rare coin
PHOTO COURTESY OF ISRAEL ANTIQUITIE­S AUTHORITY/ EMIL ALADJEM The rare coin

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