by Yori Yalon
Thousand-year-old inscription discovered at mosque near Hebron calls Dome of the Rock "Bait al-Maqdess," Arabicized version of Beit Hamikdash, Hebrew name for the Temple • Archaeologist: There is plenty of evidence early Islam was influenced by Judaism.
Early Muslims referred to
the Dome of the Rock by a version of the Hebrew name for the Jewish
Temple, archaeologists reveal
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Photo credit: AFP |
A 1,000-year-old early Muslim inscription provides yet more crucial proof of Jewish ties to the Temple Mount and Jerusalem.
At a conference on Thursday, archaeologists
Assaf Avraham and Perez Reuven presented an ancient Muslim inscription
that refers to the Dome of the Rock on the Temple Mount as "Bait
al-Maqdess," an Arabicized version of the Hebrew words for the Temple,
Beit Hamikdash.
The inscription was discovered at a recently excavated central mosque in the village of Nuba near Hebron.
The conference also presented other sources
from the early Muslim period referring to the Dome of the Rock as
"al-Maqdess." These findings demonstrate how Jewish tradition influenced
the religious worldview of nascent Islam in the seventh century.
"At the start of the Muslim period, religious
rites were held inside the Dome of the Rock compound that imitated the
ceremonies conducted in the Jewish Temple," Avraham said at the
conference.
"The people who conducted those ceremonies
would purify themselves, change their clothes, burn incense, anoint the
rock with oil, place curtains around the Foundation Stone, just like the
ornamental curtain that existed in the [Jewish] Temple.
"In addition, those worshippers would wear
ceremonial clothing and use incense burners over the Foundation Stone.
These actions teach us that the Muslims saw the Dome of the Rock as the
continuance of the Jewish Temple."
The Muslim findings come on the heels of the
discovery last week of an ancient papyrus document from the First Temple
period (the seventh century BCE) written in ancient Hebrew script that
referenced the city of Jerusalem.
The papyrus is the oldest example of Hebrew
writing found to date that mentions Jerusalem, which along with the
inscription from the Nuba village mosque demonstrates the Jewish
people's unquestionable ties to the Temple Mount, despite the recent
vote by UNESCO to negate that historical link.
"There is plenty of evidence that shows the Jewish
influence on the Muslim world at the beginning [of Islam]. Among other
things, we can take notice of Muslim coins minted in the Land of Israel
in the eighth century by Muslim rulers, which feature the symbol of the
menorah of the Temple," Avraham said.
Yori Yalon
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=37507
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Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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