Ancient underwater treasure found in Caesarea with Christian gold ring
Maritime archaeologists found several precious artifacts, hundreds of silver coins from two shipwrecks dating over a millennium apart in the ancient harbor.
By ROSSELLA TERCATIN, Jerusalem Post, DECEMBER 22, 2021
The underwater discovery of the gold ring.
(photo credit: ISRAEL ANTIQUITIES AUTHORITY MARINE ARCHAEOLOGY UNIT)
Some time ago, a team of divers from the Antiquities Authority’s
(IAA) Marine Archaeology Unit was surveying an area just outside the
harbor of Caesarea, as they routinely do off the entire coast of Israel.
“We
spotted a broken metal anchor and decided to see if there was more in
the area,” said archaeologist Jacob Sharvit. “We soon started to find
many other artifacts.”
That
diving led to the discovery of an incredible underwater treasure, from
two ancient ships dating back to the third and 14th centuries CE that wrecked
in the same spot just meters off the coast – over 1,000 years apart, as
the IAA revealed Wednesday. The treasures included hundreds of coins
and some unique jewelry.
First established in the fourth century BCE, in the first century,
Caesarea was selected by Herod to build a port city. The city remained
an important center throughout the Roman and Byzantine times.
The
artifacts from the Roman period included silver and bronze coins –
which allowed the expert to date the findings – a precious gemstone with
a lyre carved on the surface, bronze bells, an eagle figurine, symbol
of the Roman rule, another figurine shaped like a dancer wearing a comic
mask, and pottery vessels.
“We
were surprised by the quantity of bells we uncovered,” said Sharvit.
“It is possible that the sailors used them to fish with fish nets during
the night, or maybe they were part of the cargo and were goods to
sell.”
Perhaps the
most extraordinary find, however, was the gold ring. Thick and shaped
as an octagon, the ring carried a green stone with the figure of a young
shepherd wrapped in a tunic and carrying a lamb on his shoulders
engraved on it. The “good shepherd” is one of the earliest expressions
to refer to Jesus, used multiple times in the Gospels.
“I am the good shepherd,” reads a verse in John. “The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep.”
“We
know that similar images were found in the Christian catacombs in
Rome,” said Helena Sokolov, a curator at the IAA Coin Department.
Caesarea was home to an important early Christian community and it is mentioned several times in the New Testament.
Among others, the Roman centurion Cornelius is said to have been baptized here by the apostle Peter (Acts 10:10).
“This
was the first instance of a non-Jew being accepted into the Christian
community,” said Sharvit. “From here, the Christian religion began to be
disseminated across the world.”
The more modern ship was carrying a hoard of about 560 silver coins from the Mamluk period.
“At the time, Caesarea was not an important center anymore,”
Sharvit noted. “The Mamluks did not really have ships or a fleet, and
they were worried that the Europeans would come to wage war from the
sea, so they destroyed many ports.”
The expert said it is not possible to determine to whom the ship belonged.
The best time to go explore maritime sites is after storms, he noted, when the currents shift sands and new remains emerge.
“We
are planning to go back to the site as soon as this storm passes,” he
said, referring to the Carmel storm that has been battering Israel for
days.
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