Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Sculpted head of mystery king found in Israel

Biblical figurative art measures 2 inches tall

- By Ilan Ben Zion

JERUSALEM — An enigmatic sculpture of a king’s head dating back nearly 3,000 years has set off a modern-day mystery caper as scholars try to figure out whose face it depicts.

The 2-inch sculpture is an exceedingl­y rare example of figurative art from the Holy Land during the 9th century B.C. — a period associated with biblical kings. Exquisitel­y preserved but for a bit of missing beard, nothing quite like it has been found before.

While scholars are certain the stern bearded figure donning a golden crown represents royalty, they are less sure which king it symbolizes, or which kingdom he may have ruled.

Archaeolog­ists unearthed the diminutive figurine in 2017 during excavation­s at a site called Abel Beth Maacah, located just south of Israel’s border with Lebanon, near the modern-day town of Metula.

Nineteenth-century archaeolog­ists identified the site, then home to a village called Abil al-Qamh, with the similarly named city mentioned in the Book of Kings.

During the 9th century B.C., the ancient town was situated in a liminal zone between three regional powers: the Aramean kingdom based in Damascus to the east, the Phoenician city of Tyre to the west, and the Israelite kingdom, with its capital in Samaria to the south.

Kings 1 15:20 mentions Abel Beth Maacah in a list of cities attacked by the Aramean King Ben Hadad in a campaign against the Israelite kingdom. “This location is very important because it suggests that the site may have shifted hands between these polities, more likely between Aram-Damascus and Israel,” said Hebrew University archaeolog­ist Naama Yahalom-Mack, who has headed the joint dig with California’s Azusa Pacific University since 2013.

Yahalom-Mack’s team was digging through the floor of a massive Iron Age structure in the summer of 2017 when a volunteer who arrived for the day struck pay dirt. The layer where the head was found dates to the 9th century B.C., the epoch associated with the rival biblical kingdoms of Israel and Judah.

In a rare move, archaeolog­ists and curators at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem rushed to put the piece on public display. A detailed report is set for publicatio­n in the June edition of the journal Near Eastern Archaeolog­y.

Eran Arie, the Israel Museum’s curator of Iron Age and Persian archaeolog­y, said the discovery was one of a kind. “In the Iron Age, if there’s any figurative art, and there largely isn’t, it’s of very low quality. And this is of exquisite quality.”

The figurine is made of faience, a glass-like material that was popular in jewelry and small human and animal figurines in ancient Egypt and the Near East.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? A figurine, dating to the 9th century B.C., of an unknown king ’s head.
The Associated Press A figurine, dating to the 9th century B.C., of an unknown king ’s head.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States