The sealing is rare evidence of written communication between the King of Assyria and the King of Judah. Credit: Eliyahu Yannai, City of David Foundation.
Ishtartv.com –archaeologymag.com
by Dario Radley, October 22, 2025
Archaeologists have unearthed an extraordinary Assyrian inscription from
the First Temple period in Jerusalem—the first of its kind to be discovered in
the city. The tiny fragment of pottery, just 2.5 centimeters in diameter and
inscribed in Akkadian cuneiform, was discovered close to the Temple Mount’s
Western Wall in excavations conducted by the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA)
and the City of David Foundation.
Dating to about 2,700 years ago, the inscription likely formed part of a
royal seal impression on an official dispatch sent from the Assyrian royal
court to the Kingdom of Judah. Scholars believe it may refer to a delay in the
payment of tribute, possibly connected with a time of tension or rebellion as
described in the Bible when King Hezekiah rebelled against Assyrian rule.
The fragment was recovered through wet sifting at Jerusalem’s Davidson
Archaeological Park to ensure its authenticity. According to the research team,
this is direct evidence of correspondence between Assyria, the ancient Near
Eastern dominant power, and Judah, a former vassal state. The document includes
a date (“the first of the month of Av”) and mentions a “chariot officer,” a
royal courier whose responsibility was to deliver official messages.
The soil layer containing the inscription was taken from Second Temple
period deposits from Jerusalem’s ancient drainage canal. Archaeologists believe
it originated from the collapse of an older First Temple structure, near one of
the closest known sites west of the Temple Mount with remains from that era.
Petrographic analysis revealed that the clay was not local but came from
the Tigris Basin region—home to Assyria’s major cities of Nineveh, Ashur, and
Nimrud (Kalḫu). This proves that the document was produced in an Assyrian
administrative center and sent to Jerusalem. A chemical study by the Geological
Survey of Israel is underway to identify its exact origin.
Although the text is incomplete, scholars have interpreted it as
evidence of political tensions between Judah and the Assyrian Empire, possibly
over missed tribute payments. The discovery sheds light on the extent of
Assyrian power in Jerusalem and the mechanisms of imperial communication during
the late 8th and early 7th centuries BCE.
The find attests to Jerusalem’s importance as an administrative and
political hub even under imperial control. It is evidence of the city’s
incorporation into the international system of the time, where letters, seals,
and tax documents circulated between the world’s most powerful empire and its
western vassal.
The inscription will be presented to the public on October 23 at the
“New Discoveries in Jerusalem and Environs” Conference.
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