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EE_
3rd February 2015, 11:51 AM
What does this mean?

Ancient tablets reveal life of Jews in Nebuchadnezzar's Babylon
By Luke Baker

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - A new exhibition of ancient clay tablets discovered in modern-day Iraq is shedding light for the first time on the daily life of Jews exiled to Babylon some 2,500 years ago.

The exhibition is based on more than 100 cuneiform tablets, each no bigger than an adult's palm, that detail transactions and contracts between Judeans driven from, or convinced to move from, Jerusalem by King Nebuchadnezzar around 600 BC.

Archaeologists got their first chance to see the tablets -- acquired by a wealthy London-based Israeli collector -- barely two years ago. They were blown away.

"It was like hitting the jackpot," said Filip Vukosavovic, an expert in ancient Babylonia, Sumeria and Assyria who curated the exhibition at Jerusalem's Bible Lands Museum.

"We started reading the tablets and within minutes we were absolutely stunned. It fills in a critical gap in understanding of what was going on in the life of Judeans in Babylonia more than 2,500 years ago."

Nebuchadnezzar, a powerful ruler famed for the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, came to Jerusalem several times as he sought to spread the reach of his kingdom.

Each time he came -- and one visit coincided with the destruction of Jerusalem's first temple in 586 BC -- he either forced or encouraged the exile of thousands of Judeans.

One exile in 587 BC saw around 1,500 people make the perilous journey via modern-day Lebanon and Syria to the fertile crescent of southern Iraq, where the Judeans traded, ran businesses and helped the administration of the kingdom.

"They were free to go about their lives, they weren't slaves," Vukosavovic said. "Nebuchadnezzar wasn't a brutal ruler in that respect. He knew he needed the Judeans to help revive the struggling Babylonian economy."

The tablets, each inscribed in minute Akkadian script, detail trade in fruits and other commodities, taxes paid, debts owed and credits accumulated.

The exhibition details one Judean family over four generations, starting with the father, Samak-Yama, his son, grandson and his grandson's five children, all with Biblical Hebrew names, many of them still in use today.

"We even know the details of the inheritance made to the five great-grandchildren," said Vukosavovic. "On the one hand it's boring details, but on the other you learn so much about who these exiled people were and how they lived."

Vukosavovic describes the tablets as completing a 2,500-year puzzle. While many Judeans returned to Jerusalem when the Babylonians allowed it after 539 BC, many others stayed and built up a vibrant Jewish community that lasted two millennia.

"The descendants of those Jews only returned to Israel in the 1950s," he said, a time when many in the diaspora moved from Iraq, Persia, Yemen and North Africa to the newly created state.

(Editing by Gareth Jones)
http://news.yahoo.com/ancient-tablets-reveal-life-jews-nebuchadnezzars-babylon-174318332.html

mick silver
3rd February 2015, 01:17 PM
we are there slaves and we are all moron and we are ficked and we are all dead . they are still making up history as the world turn

Santa
3rd February 2015, 01:34 PM
Now I know where the expression, "chiseling Jews" comes from.

Neuro
3rd February 2015, 02:44 PM
So the forced exile lasted only 50 years, but they got busy making a profit out of goyim life for the next 2500 years, and writing the cookbook for world domination, the Talmud, and then they could go back and run out the inhabitants of Palestine, after all significant resistance to world domination was erased in WWII...

Poor persecuted Jews!

Glass
3rd February 2015, 10:47 PM
Archaeologists got their first chance to see the tablets -- acquired by a wealthy London-based Israeli collector -- barely two years ago. They were blown away.

How did he get them? Where were they? In the museums in Baghdad?




"They were free to go about their lives, they weren't slaves," Vukosavovic said. "Nebuchadnezzar wasn't a brutal ruler in that respect. He knew he needed the Judeans to help revive the struggling Babylonian economy."

BS


"The descendants of those Jews only returned to Israel in the 1950s," he said, a time when many in the diaspora moved from Iraq, Persia, Yemen and North Africa to the newly created state.

Also BS

I was reading up on Nebuchadnezzar wiki yesterday. Curious coincidence.

osoab
4th February 2015, 02:22 AM
Is Oded Golan plying his trade again?

http://www.athenapub.com/biblical-artifacts.htm


Also, in the past two years, Oded Golan and his entire collection have been under intense scrutiny. Initially, he was held by Israeli authorities for questioning about his role as a possible forger and receiver of stolen antiquities, but eventually released without being charged. Then in late December 2004, Israeli police indicted him along with three antiquities dealers (Robert Deutsch, Shlomo Cohen, and Faiz-al-Amaleh) on charges of running a forgery ring for over twenty years. Charges also included causing damage to antiquities and receiving fraudulent goods. The case is of particular interest because the items now declared to be fakes were once considered some of the most highly valued historical and religious pieces to be found in Israel.

Neuro
4th February 2015, 03:35 AM
Is Oded Golan plying his trade again?

http://www.athenapub.com/biblical-artifacts.htm
His brother Smea Golan is counting the money...
http://fc08.deviantart.net/fs18/f/2007/139/e/c/Jewish_Gollum_by_shadowchiller.jpg

osoab
4th February 2015, 03:35 PM
His brother Smea Golan is counting the money...
http://fc08.deviantart.net/fs18/f/2007/139/e/c/Jewish_Gollum_by_shadowchiller.jpg

How much money will they be counting when the tablets read that 6 million judea were slaughtered by the Babylonians? :D

Glass
4th February 2015, 07:03 PM
there isn't any actual mention of who is the owner of these tablets. Can't find anything so far.

expat4ever
4th February 2015, 08:29 PM
How did he get them? Where were they? In the museums in Baghdad? Thats what I was thinking as well.

Hatha Sunahara
5th February 2015, 01:51 AM
So the forced exile lasted only 50 years, but they got busy making a profit out of goyim life for the next 2500 years, and writing the cookbook for world domination, the Talmud, and then they could go back and run out the inhabitants of Palestine, after all significant resistance to world domination was erased in WWII...

Poor persecuted Jews!

The forced exile lasted 70 years, but it didn't matter. Two thirds of them stayed in Babylon because life was better there for them there than back home in Judea. That bunch went on to write the Talmud which incorporates what they learned of the Babylonian Mystery Religion, which they went on to have those values supplant the values originally espoused in the 5 Books of Moses. If you peek into a Jewish religious school, you will note it is called a Talmud-Torah school. This is where the ordinary Jews learn the moral values in the Torah--which is read aloud in the Synagogues every Saturday, and in the same school, the selected bright co-operative, political whiz kids lean the legalistic Talmud--in which all the moral values are stripped out, and the only thin that's important is if something is 'legal'. The American Legal system has been influenced greatly by the Talmud--ordinary Americans don't understand the laws, just like ordinary Jews don't know and therefore can't understand the Talmud--only their Rabbis understand it because it is transmitted in an oral tradition among the elite--just as American Jurisprudence is transmitted orally to American Lawyers who are the elite, and can be disbarred for 'spilling the beans' to the plebs, so they don't. Because of the Jewish Experience in Babylon, the entire western world is modeled after Babylon.


Hatha