An Iron Age II Pictorial Inscription from Jerusalem Illustrating Yahweh and Asherah

Author: Gilmour, Garth

Source: Palestine Exploration Quarterly, Volume 141, Number 2, July 2009 , pp. 87-103(17)

Publisher: Maney Publishing

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Abstract:

During the P.E.F. excavations at the Ophel in Jerusalem in the 1920s a large sherd of an Iron Age II jug was found with a pictorial design incised on the surface. The design shows two humanoid figures above a series of semi-circles bordering the broken edge of the sherd. The figures are joined by rough lines above and below the waist. The details of the figures include traditional Canaanite elements that indicate they are deity figures, one male and one female, and it is proposed that they represent Yahweh and Asherah. If so, this would add to the growing record of textual and symbolic imagery of Yahweh and Asherah together from Iron Age Israel and Judah. The sherd and its inscription are critical to our understanding of early Israelite religion, its relationship to its Canaanite antecedents, and to the nature of folk religion in Judah in the period of the monarchy.

Document Type: Research Article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/174313009x437800

Affiliations: Dept of Old Testament, University of Stellenbosch, 7600 Stellenbosch, South Africa

Publication date: 2009-07-01

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