May 26, 2012, Saturday, 146

Tel Miqne-Ekron, 7th century BCE

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Tel-Miqne-Ekron hoard
Tel-Miqne-Ekron hoard

Two buried treasures were found in excavations of Trude Dothan and Seymour Gittin in 1992. One treasure had been placed within a jug that was in turn placed within another vessel and then buried beneath the floor of the building. Inside the broken jug, archaeologists found 77 silver ingots, and a gold bead. The ingots are folded and elongated in shape and weigh more than two pounds altogether. According to professors Dothan and Gitin, these ingots served as a kind of currency in the seventh century B.C.E., at about the same time that minted coins first began to come into use. The other was a cache of 31 pieces of jewelry lay in the hole of a large perforated stone weight, found in a destroyed 7th-century room of the city’s acropolis.


Buried Philistine Treasures Unearthed at Tel Miqne-Ekron, BAR 19:01, Jan/Feb 1993.

Iron Knife
Iron Knife

The many artifacts of iron found at Ekron, including a knife with a carved ivory handle, also underscore the biblical statement on the Philistine monopoly of production of iron weaponry. (1 Samuel 13:19)


Geva, Hillel, Archeological Sites in Israel, No. 4. Jerusalem: Israel Information Center, 1999.


See also:

  1. Excavating Ekron, Seymour Gitin, BAR 31:06, Nov/Dec 2005.