The Borneo Post

Researcher­s say ancient ring may bear Pontius Pilate name

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JERUSALEM: Israeli researcher­s say an inscriptio­n on an ancient ring discovered near Jerusalem may include the name of Pontius Pilate, the Roman official who Biblical accounts say sentenced Jesus to death.

It would be a rare example still in existence of an inscriptio­n with the name of the man believed to have sent Jesus to his crucifixio­n.

The researcher­s recently announced their analysis of the inscriptio­n on the ring — which was actually found some 50 years ago — in Israel Exploratio­n Journal.

The journal is published by the Israel Exploratio­n Society and the Institute of Archaeolog­y at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University.

They say the copper-alloy ring, dated to around 2,000 years ago and used to apply a seal, was found at Herodium, an ancient palace built by King Herod near Jerusalem and Bethlehem, today located in the occupied West Bank.

The palace later became a fortress for Jewish rebels fighting the Romans.

An inscriptio­n in Greek letters reads “of Pilatus”, while the ring also depicts a wine vessel known as a krater.

The researcher­s say it is unlikely that the ring belonged to Pilate himself, though possibly to a member of his administra­tion or someone else entirely.

“Since the inscriptio­n on the ring reads ‘of Pilatus’, the first associatio­n that comes to mind is Pontius Pilatus, the prefect of the Roman province of Judaea 2636 CE, under Emperor Tiberius Caesar,” they write.

It adds however: “Since the name Pilatus is rare, it is not inconceiva­ble that this ring belonged to Pontius Pilatus himself. However, we think it implausibl­e that a prefect would have used a simple, all- metal, copper- alloy personal sealing ring with a motif that was already a well- known Jewish motif in Judaea before and during his rule.”

The Israel Museum says the only other object from Pilate’s time bearing his name is a stone with an inscriptio­n found in Caesarea, today located in Israel along the Mediterran­ean coast.

The stone is part of the museum’s collection. — AFP

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