The Jerusalem Post

2 scribes behind inscriptio­ns discovered in Samaria

- • By ROSSELLA TERCATIN

In 1910, American archaeolog­ist George Andrew Reisner was conducting an excavation in Samaria, the first ancient capital of the biblical Kingdom of Israel. In the heart of the land where many of the events of the Bible took place, Reisner made an extraordin­ary discovery: over 100 fragments of pottery carrying ink-on-clay biblical Hebrew inscriptio­ns.

One hundred and ten years later, research by Tel Aviv University has shown that only two authors are behind 31 of the renowned “Samaria Ostraca” fragments, shedding light on the life of ancient Israelites.

The study, which was published on Wednesday in scientific research journal PLOS One, also confirmed that the inscriptio­ns were written in the city of Samaria itself.

The team behind this discovery included archaeolog­ists as well as physicists and other hard science experts.

“If only two scribes wrote the examined Samaria texts contempora­neously and both were located in Samaria rather than in the countrysid­e, this would indicate a palace bureaucrac­y at the peak of the Kingdom of Israel’s prosperity,” archaeolog­ist and coauthor Prof. Israel Finkelstei­n explained.

The landmark inscriptio­ns list shipments of items such as oil and wine to Samaria over the course of at least seven years, providing a glimpse into the logistical infrastruc­ture of the kingdom. Moreover, names of peoples, clans and villages are provided along with the year of a given monarchy when the shipment took place.

According to the TAU team, the fragments likely date back to the first half of the eighth century BCE, possibly during the reign of King Jeroboam II, whose kingdom is described in the biblical Book of 2 Kings.

“Our results, accompanie­d by other pieces of evidence, also seem to indicate a limited dispersion of literacy in Israel in the early 8th century BCE,” coauthor Prof. Eliezer Piasetzky highlighte­d.

An earlier study by the same group of researcher­s, published in 2016, showed that around 150 years later in the 6th century BCE, literacy was much more widespread in the region.

“It seems that during these two centuries that passed between the compositio­n of the Samaria and the Arad corpora, there was an increase in literacy rates within the population of the Hebrew kingdoms,” PhD candidate Arie Shaus said.

“Our previous research paved the way for the current study. We enhanced our previously developed methodolog­y, which sought the minimum number of writers, and introduced new statistica­l tools to establish a most likelihood estimate for the number of hands in a corpus,” Shaus added.

In order to assess how many writers were behind the ostraca inscriptio­ns, the team developed an algorithm employing a combinatio­n of image processing and machine learning technology.

According to PhD candidate and coauthor Barak Sober, this algorithm allowed researcher­s “to conclude that two writers wrote the 31 examined texts, with a confidence interval of 95%.”

The group said that it intends to employ the technology it developed to study other inscriptio­ns from different times and locations.

 ?? (The Semitic Museum, Harvard University) ?? COLORIZED OSTRACA (ink on clay inscriptio­ns) from Samaria, the capital of biblical Israel. The inscriptio­ns are dated around the early 8th century BCE.
(The Semitic Museum, Harvard University) COLORIZED OSTRACA (ink on clay inscriptio­ns) from Samaria, the capital of biblical Israel. The inscriptio­ns are dated around the early 8th century BCE.

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