Photo Credit: T Rogovski
Highlighted letter samekh inscribed on storage jar.

“And the Lord delivered Lachish into the hand of Israel, which took it on the second day, and smote it with the edge of the sword, and all the souls therein…” (Joshua, 10:32)

The Biblical Book of Joshua tells the story of the ancient Israelites’ entry into the Promised Land after a 40-year sojourn in the desert. Now, a team of archaeologists led by Professor Yosef Garfinkel at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Institute of Archaeology and Professor Michael Hasel at Southern Adventist University in Tennessee, have opened a window onto the Canaanite society that inhabited the land during that era.

Temple at Tel Lachish / Courtesy of the Fourth Expedition to Lachish
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Of particular interest was a pottery sherd engraved with ancient Canaanite script. There, the letter “samekh” (ס) appears, marked by an elongated vertical line crossed by three perpendicular shorter lines. This makes it the oldest known example of the letter and a unique specimen for the study of ancient alphabets.

In a study published last month in Levant (The Alphabetic “Scribe” of the Lachish Jar Inscription and the Hieratic Tradition in the Early Iron Age), Garfinkel and his co-authors revealed, for the first time ever, extensive ruins of a Canaanite temple dating to the 12th century BCE that they uncovered in National Park Tel Lachish, a large Bronze Age-era settlement near the present-day Israeli city of Kiryat Gat.

Hebrew University Prof. Yosef Garfinekl / Hebrew University

Lachish was one of the most important Canaanite cities in the Land of Israel during the Middle and late Bronze Ages; its people controlled large parts of the Judean lowlands. The city was built around 1800 BCE and later destroyed by the Egyptians around 1550 BCE. It was rebuilt and destroyed twice more, succumbing for good around 1150 BCE. The settlement is mentioned in both the Bible and in various Egyptian sources and was one of the few Canaanite cities to survive into the 12th century BCE.

Aerial view of Tel Lachish / Courtesy of the Fourth Expedition to Lachish

“This excavation has been breath-taking,” shared Garfinkel. “Only once every 30 or 40 years do we get the chance to excavate a Canaanite temple in Israel. What we found sheds new light on ancient life in the region. It would be hard to overstate the importance of these findings.”

Bronze cauldrons found in Lachish temple / T. Rogovski

The layout of the temple is similar to other Canaanite temples in northern Israel, among them Nablus, Megiddo and Hatzor. The front of the compound is marked by two columns and two towers leading to a large hall. The inner sanctum has four supporting columns and several unhewn “standing stones” that may have served as representations of temple gods. The Lachish temple is more square in shape and has several side rooms, typical of later temples including Solomon’s Temple.

Pottery uncovered in Lachish Temple / C. Amit / Israel Antiquities Authority

In addition to these archaeological ruins, the team unearthed a trove of artifacts including, bronze cauldrons, Egyptian goddess Hathor-inspired jewelry, daggers and axe-heads adorned with bird images, scarabs, and a gold-plated bottle inscribed with the name Ramses II, one of Egypt’s most powerful pharaohs.

The two ‘smiting gods’ figurines / T Rogovski

Near the temple’s holy sanctuary, the team found two bronze figurines. Unlike the winged cherubs in Solomon’s Temple, the Lachish figurines were armed “smiting gods.”

Gold earrings found in Lachish temple / T Rogovski

Only time will tell what treasures still remain to be uncovered in the ancient city of Lachish.


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David writes news at JewishPress.com.