List of inscriptions in biblical archaeology


The following is a list of inscribed artifacts, items made or given shape by humans, that are significant to biblical archaeology.

Selected artifacts significant to biblical chronology

This table lists inscriptions which are of particular significance to the study of biblical chronology. References are from ANET and COS and link to editio princeps, if known.

Egyptian

Other significant Egyptian artifacts

  • Execration texts – earliest references to many Biblical locations
  • Papyrus Brooklyn 35.1446 – A document that lists the names of 45 individuals, including a Canaanite woman named "Šp-ra." Scholars assume that this is a hieroglyphic transliteration of the Hebrew name "Shiphrah," which also appears in Exodus 1:15–21. However, while the name may be related, the document dates to c. 1833–1743 BCE.
  • Ipuwer Papyrus – poem describing Egypt as afflicted by natural disasters and in a state of chaos. The document is dated to around 1250 BC but the content is thought to be earlier, dated back to the Middle Kingdom, though no earlier than the late Twelfth Dynasty. Once thought to describe the biblical Exodus, it is now considered the world's earliest known treatise on political ethics, suggesting that a good king is one who controls unjust officials, thus carrying out the will of the gods.
  • Berlin pedestal relief – considered by many modern scholars to contain the earliest historic reference to ancient Israel. Experts remain divided on this hypothesis.

Cuneiform

Other significant cuneiform artifacts

Canaanite, Aramaic and Hebrew

Other significant Canaanite, Aramaic and Hebrew artifacts

Greek and Latin

NameImageCurrent locationDiscoveredDateWritingSignificanceRefs
Eunēlos inscriptionLikely the National Museum of DamascusRas Macalister's excavations of GezerGreekEarly Greek trigrammaton attestation with syncretic character, refers to Hercules and a feast of Yahweh Inasios.
Temple Warning inscriptionIstanbul Archaeology Museums1871, JerusalemGreekBelieved to be an inscription from Herod's Temple, warning foreigners to refrain from entering the Temple enclosure
Arch of TitusOriginal locationn.a., RomeLatinRelief showing spoils from the Sack of Jerusalem by Titus in 70 AD. Depicted are the menorah and trumpets, as well as what might be the Table of Showbread.

Other significant Greek and Latin artifacts

Controversial (forgery, claimed forgery, or identification disputed)

Significant museums

Concordance of external lists

ANET: Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament. Third Edition with Supplement. Ed. James B. Pritchard. Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1969COS: The Context of Scripture. 3 volumes. Eds. William W. Hallo and K. Lawson Younger. Leiden: Brill, 1997–2002

Other external lists

RANE:
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