Nov 30 2005
Hebrew (or Phoenician) Alphabet Found at Tel-Zayit
The discovery of the earliest Hebrew (or possibly Phoenician) abecedary has been announced by archeologists with the Zeitah Excavations sponsored by Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. The website announcement states:
The New York Times broke the story of the Tel Zayit Inscription on November 9, 2005. On November 20, 2005, Dr. Tappy (Director of The Zeitah Excavations and G. Albert Shoemaker Professor of Bible and Archaeology at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary) and epigrapher P. Kyle McCarter (William Foxwell Albright Professor of Ancient Near Eastern Studies at Johns Hopkins University) will, respectively, describe the archaeology relating to the discovery of the stone and analyze the writing on it at the annual meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature at the Philadelphia Convention Center in Pennsylvania. Their lecture is titled "The Tel Zayit Stone: A New Tenth-Century BCE Inscription from the Judaean Shephelah."
In addition, Professors Tappy and McCarter will present their lecture at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary on Thursday, December 8, at 7:30 p.m. in Hicks Memorial Chapel Auditorium. Admission is free and open to the public.
More details on this year’s meeting are available at SBL’s website. See here for other newspaper articles or go to PaleoJudaica.
GKC provides a Table of Alphabets showing the known Hebrew writing systems.
***UPDATE 2***
For more information: Go to the new DH post: Order and Origin of the Hebrew Alphabet.
***UPDATE 3***
AP pictures of the inscription are available at Codex Blogspot.
***UPDATE 4***
From SBL’s website (here):
The Tel Zayit Stone: A New Tenth-Century Inscription from the Judaean Shephelah
11/20/2005
7:00 PM to 8:30 PM
Room: Room 103-A – Pennsylvania Convention Center
A dramatic discovery punctuated this year’s excavation season at Tel Zayit, Israel, where The Zeitah Excavations recovered a large stone bearing an incised, two-line inscription. The special importance of the stone derives not only from its archaic alphabetic text, which hints at formal scribal training at the site, but also from its well-defined archaeological context in a structure dating securely to the tenth century BCE. The borderland site of Tel Zayit lies in the lowlands district of Judah, and in this period it exhibits strong links with the highland culture to the east, in the direction of Jerusalem, not with the coastal culture of the Philistine plain. The early appearance of literacy at Tel Zayit will surely play a pivotal role in the current discussion of the archaeology and history of Israel and Judah in the tenth century BCE.
Lawrence Stager, Harvard University, Presiding
Ron Tappy, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, Panelist
P. Kyle McCarter, Johns Hopkins University, Panelist
***UPDATE 5***
Notes from SBL ASOR on the Tel Zayit Inscription from deinde blog.
***UPDATE 6***
More from the SBL session on Tel Zayit on Higgaion and PaleoJudaica.
***UPDATE 7***
Dr. Cathey’s and Paleojudica have reported about an interview with P. Kyle McCarter in the Johns Hopkins Gazette on the Tel-Zayit inscription. Quote from the article:
"Part of it has to do with the history of the alphabet itself," McCarter says. "The 10th century was the time when the Hebrew script was emerging as a distinct tradition." In fact, he says, a case can be made that the Tel Zayit stone is the oldest Hebrew inscription ever found.
Additionally, Kevin at biblicalia has some thoughts to contribute to the "Zayit debates".