header

Destruction by Fire: Reconstructing the Evidence of the 586 BCE Babylonian Destruction in a Monumental Building in Jerusalem

32 Pages Posted: 9 May 2023 Publication Status: Published

See all articles by Nitsan Shalom

Nitsan Shalom

Tel Aviv University

Yoav Vaknin

Tel Aviv University

Ron Shaar

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Erez Ben-Yosef

Tel Aviv University

Oded Lipschits

Tel Aviv University

Yiftah Shalev

Israel Antiquities Authority

Yuval Gadot

Tel Aviv University

elisabetta boaretto

Weizmann Institute of Science

Abstract

Evidence of fire is one of the most important features for identifying and characterizing destruction events. Analysis of microscopic remains of fire has developed exceedingly in recent years, enabling archaeologists to examine new questions relating to the intensity of destruction events and to the circumstances of the creation of destruction layers. One of the most crucial events in the history of the Southern Levant is the Babylonian destruction of Judah and its capital Jerusalem in 586 BCE, which shaped the biblical narrative and theology for generations to come. Building 100 was an extraordinarily large and rich elite building, thoroughly destroyed during the Babylonian campaign. This paper presents a study of the destruction layer excavated within the rooms of the building. FTIR spectrometry and archaeomagnetic analysis were combined in the micro-archaeological study of the remains in order to create a detailed reconstruction of the destruction event. This reconstruction sheds new light on how the Babylonian destruction was manifested in reality in the elite buildings of Jerusalem.

Keywords: Babylonian destruction, FTIR spectroscopy, archaeomagnetism, fire analysis, Iron Age Jerusalem

Suggested Citation

Shalom, Nitsan and Vaknin, Yoav and Shaar, Ron and Ben-Yosef, Erez and Lipschits, Oded and Shalev, Yiftah and Gadot, Yuval and boaretto, elisabetta, Destruction by Fire: Reconstructing the Evidence of the 586 BCE Babylonian Destruction in a Monumental Building in Jerusalem. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4441154 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4441154

Nitsan Shalom (Contact Author)

Tel Aviv University ( email )

Ramat Aviv
Tel-Aviv, 6997801
Israel

Yoav Vaknin

Tel Aviv University ( email )

Ramat Aviv
Tel-Aviv, 6997801
Israel

Ron Shaar

Hebrew University of Jerusalem ( email )

Mount Scopus
Jerusalem, 91905
Israel

Erez Ben-Yosef

Tel Aviv University ( email )

Ramat Aviv
Tel-Aviv, 6997801
Israel

Oded Lipschits

Tel Aviv University ( email )

Yiftah Shalev

Israel Antiquities Authority ( email )

Yuval Gadot

Tel Aviv University ( email )

Elisabetta Boaretto

Weizmann Institute of Science ( email )

234 Herzl Street
Rehovot, 76100
Israel

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
108
Abstract Views
479
PlumX Metrics