Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp”

Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp” These Jar Handles with Judean Royal Stamp belonged to storage jars that were made nearly 3,000 years ago which h...
Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp”
Explore the Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp”

These “Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp” belonged to storage jars that were made nearly 3,000 years ago which have visible impressions of stamps on their handles.

The stamp impressions consist of an inscription in palaeo-Hebrew together with a symbol. The inscription on the handle above reads “lmlk” which translates to “belonging to King”. The royal symbol is a four-winged beetle.

Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp”

The stamp on the handle on the left is inscribed with “belonging to the King” with the place name of “Sukoh”. The handle on the right is also inscribed with “belonging to King” with the place name “Ziph”. Both carry the symbol of a two-winged sun disk.

These stamped jars were part of a centralised system to distribute the products of the Judean royal agricultural estates to administrators and soldiers. These large storage jars were used to contain wine, grain or oil.

It is argued that the jars held food intended for the army and civilians as part of the preparations for the revolt by Hezekiah ( 716-687 BC), King of Judah, against Assyria.

Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp”

In the picture above, the seal impression on the handle on the left is inscribed with “lmsl m’lntn” which translates to “belonging to the “Meshulam [son of] ‘Elnatan.” The handle on the right is inscribed with “lmlk mmst” which translates to ‘belonging to King. The place-name “mmst” is an unknown name and has the symbol of a four-winged beetle.

Almost two thousand of these stamped jar handles have been discovered with variations of royal symbols and place names. Most have an inscription in paleo-Hebrew reading “lamelek” which means “belonging to the King”. The place names were probably administrative centres in Judah where taxes in kind were brought and stored.

Recent scientific research on ceramic jars handle fragments from ancient Judea have revealed that the Earth’s geomagnetic field has been undulating for thousands of years. Data obtained from the analysis of well-dated Judean jar handles provide valuable insights on the historical changes in the strength of the earth’s geomagnetic fields.

Ancient Ceramics can act as a recorder of the magnetic field. Ceramics have tiny minerals that save information about the magnetic field at the time the clay was in the kiln. By studying these Jar Handles, scientists now have proof that the earth’s magnetic field has fluctuated violently in the past, without dooming our planet.

Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp”

  • Title: Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp”
  • Dates: 900 – 701 BCE
  • Period: Gideon, Iron IIB
  • Provenience: Israel, Beth Shemesh
  • Materials: Ceramic
  • Technique: Stamped
  • Museum: Penn Museum

Explore the Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

  • Marble Portrait of Agrippina the Elder
  • Herm of Herakles and Hermes
  • Marble head of Emperor Caracalla
  • Cult Statue Head of Diana
  • Wine Transport Amphoras
  • Greenstone Mask
  • Egyptian Stela Fragment
  • Sumerian Cone or Clay Nail
  • Clovis Weapons & Tools
  • Mayan Altar
  • Shawabti of King Senkamanisken
  • Coptic Pendant Crosses
  • Jar Handles with Judean “Royal Stamp”
  • Historical Objects of the Penn Museum

Reflections:

  • Ancient Ceramics can act as a historical record of the magnetic field from the past. We now have proof that the earth’s magnetic field has fluctuated violently in the past.

~~~

“A righteous man falls seven times and gets up.“
– King Solomon, Proverbs, 24:16

~~~

Photo Credit: GM

Top Posts & Pages Museums, Art Galleries & Historical Sites - Virtual Tours "The Cardsharps" by Caravaggio Petersen Automotive Museum - Virtual Tour The Broad - Virtual Tour Japanese American National Museum - Virtual Tour Griffith Observatory - Virtual Tour "Portrait of an Old Woman" by Hans Memling Autry Museum of the American West - Virtual Tour Quotes about Museums, Art and History "Saint Jerome as Scholar" by El Greco Sponsor your Favorite Page

Join – The JOM Membership Program

Become a Patron!

Sponsor a Masterpiece with YOUR NAME CHOICE for $5

SEARCH Search for: Search Follow Us
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Email

6 March 2019, 12:32 | Views: 9685

Add new comment

For adding a comment, please log in
or create account

0 comments