Biblical ‘fertility amulet’ found by 11-year-old in the Negev
The artifact depicts a stylized bare-breasted woman wearing a scarf with her hands folded under her chest and dates back to some 2,500 years ago.
By Rossella Tercatin, Jerusalem Post, March 9, 2021
Female figuirine, probably a fertility amulet, discovered in the Negev Desert
(photo credit: YEVGENY OSTROVSKY/ISRAEL ANTIQUITIES AUTHORITY.)
A child on a family hike in the Negev found a figurine dating back
to the biblical period, the Antiquities Authority announced Tuesday.
The
artifact depicts a stylized bare-breasted woman wearing a scarf with
her hands folded under her chest. It is about 2,500 years old and is
from the late First Temple period or the beginning of the Persian
period, also known as the “Return to Zion,” the IAA said in a press
release. It probably served as an amulet for fertility and protection for infants, it said.
(Yevgeny Ostrovsky/Israel Antiquities Authority)
“Pottery
figurines of bare-breasted women are known from various periods in
Israel, including the First Temple era,” according to Oren Shmueli and
Debbie Ben Ami, IAA curators of the Iron Age and Persian periods. “They
were common in the home and in everyday life, like the hamsa [hand
design] today, and apparently served as amulets to ensure protection,
good luck and prosperity.
“We
must bear in mind that in antiquity, medical understanding was
rudimentary. Infant mortality was very high, and about a third of those
born did not survive. There was little understanding of hygiene, and
fertility treatment was naturally nonexistent. In the absence of
advanced medicine, amulets provided hope and an important way of
appealing for aid.”
Fertility gods were very common in ancient cultures. The Bible offers many testimonies to the influence that neighboring populations had on the Israelites.
The
pottery figurine, about seven centimeters high and six cm. wide, was
spotted by 11-year-old Zvi Ben-David from Beersheba while on a family
trip to Nahal Habesor, a trail in the South that follows the Besor River
riverbed.
The boy’s mother, a professional tour guide, understood the importance of the find and alerted the IAA.
Only one other similar figurine, also found in the northern Negev, is kept at the National Treasures collection.
“The
exemplary citizenship of young Zvi Ben-David will enable us to improve
our understanding of cultic practices in biblical times and man’s
inherent need for material human personifications,” Shmueli and Ben-Ami
were quoted as saying.
I used to have one of those in my garden, a pre-historic garden gnome fertility amulet .
Neander-Troll says :Be sure to recommend and follow Chucks " Life of Earth " Blog at:
I used to have one of those in my garden, a pre-historic garden gnome fertility amulet . Neander-Troll says :Be sure to recommend and follow Chucks " Life of Earth " Blog at: |
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