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Sunday, December 22, 2024 |
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Oldest inscribed tablet of the Ten Commandments soars to $5M at Sotheby's |
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Dating to Late Roman-Byzantine Era ( ca. 300 - 800 CE), the remarkable artifact is the only known complete example of its kind. Courtesy Sotheby's.
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NEW YORK, NY.- Sothebys auctioned one of the most widely known and influential texts in history: the oldest inscribed stone tablet of the Ten Commandments. Dating to the Late Roman-Byzantine period, this remarkable artifact is approximately 1,500 years old and is the only complete tablet of the Ten Commandments still extant from this early era. It was offered as a single-lot sale on 18 December.
Weighing 115 pounds and measuring approximately two feet in height, the marble tablet inscribed in Paleo-Hebrew script, was unearthed in 1913 during railway excavations along the southern coast of the Land of Israel, near the sites of early synagogues, mosques, and churches. The significance of the discovery went unrecognized for many decades, and for thirty years it served as a paving stone at the entrance to a local home, with the inscription facing upwards and exposed to foot traffic.
In 1943, the tablet was sold to a scholar who recognized it as an important Samaritan Decalogue featuring the divine precepts central to many faiths, one that may have originally been displayed in a synagogue or a private dwelling. The original site of the tablet was likely destroyed during either the Roman invasions of 400- 600 CE or the later Crusades of the 11th century.
The twenty lines of text incised on the stone closely follow the Biblical verses familiar to both Christian and Jewish traditions. However, this tablet contains only nine of the commandments as found in the Book of Exodus, omitting the admonition Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord in vain while including a new directive to worship on Mount Gerizim, a holy site specific to the Samaritans.
An extraordinary treasure from antiquity, inscribed with the moral code that underpins Western civilization, this stone tablet is a bridge between faiths, regions, and eras.
"This remarkable tablet is not only a vastly important historic artifact, but a tangible link to the beliefs that helped shape Western civilization. To encounter this shared piece of cultural heritage is to journey through millennia and connect with cultures and faiths told through one of humanity's earliest and most enduring moral codes."
Richard Austin, Sothebys Global Head of Books s Manuscripts
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