Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Archaeological Breakthrough: Royal Purple Fabric Found From Time Of King Solomon...BY JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH/ISRAEL 365 NEWS FEBRUARY 02, 2021 Share this article:

 

Archaeological Breakthrough: Royal Purple Fabric Found From Time Of King Solomon

News Image BY JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH/ISRAEL 365 NEWS FEBRUARY 02, 2021
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What did a fashionable King in Israel wear 3,000 years ago? The color purple as well as red and blue were prominent in their wardrobes. 

Four years ago, archaeologists at Tel Aviv University (TAU) discovered reserved pieces of cloth from King David and King Solomon's time at ancient copper mines in the Timna Valley in Israel's southern Negev desert that had been colored blue and red with dye from various plants. Thanks to the very dry climate in the area, the colors have been preserved for three millennia. 

Now, in a "breakthrough discovery," the team have found ancient scraps of fabric dyed in true royal purple from shellfish. "The color immediately attracted our attention, but we found it hard to believe we had found true purple from such an ancient era," said TAU's Dr. Erez Ben-Yosef. 

According to the researchers, true purple [argaman in Hebrew] was produced from three species of mollusk native to the Mediterranean Sea - the banded dye-murex (Hexaplex trunculus), the spiny dye-murex (Bolinus brandaris) and the red-mouthed rock-shell (Stramonita haemastoma). The dye was produced from a gland located within the body of the mollusk by means of a complex chemical process that lasted several days. 


According to the Song of Songs, King Solomon had a carriage made from wood brought from Lebanon whose seat was upholstered with purple cloth. Now, for the first time, rare evidence has been found confirming this. 

While examining the colored textiles from Timna in a study that has lasted several years, the researchers were surprised to find remnants of woven fabric, a tassel and fibers of wool dyed with royal purple. 

Direct radiocarbon dating confirms that the finds date from approximately 1,000 BCE, corresponding to the biblical monarchies of David and Solomon in Jerusalem. The dye, which is produced from species of mollusk (shelled animal) found in the Mediterranean, over 300 kilometers from Timna, is often mentioned in the Bible and appears in various Jewish and Christian contexts. 

This is the first time that purple-dyed Iron Age textiles have been found in Israel, or indeed throughout the Southern Levant. The research was carried out by Dr. Naama Sukenik from the Israel Antiquities Authority and Ben-Yosef of TAU's department of archaeology and ancient Near Eastern Cultures, in collaboration with Prof. Zohar Amar, Dr. David Iluz and Dr. Alexander Varvak from BIU and Dr. Orit Shamir from the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA). 

The unexpected finds are being published today in the prestigious journal PLoS (Public Library of Science) One under the title "Early evidence of royal purple dyed textile from Timna Valley." 

"This is a very exciting and important discovery," said Sukenik, the IAA's curator of organic. "This is the first piece of textile ever found from the time of David and Solomon that is dyed with the prestigious purple dye. In antiquity, purple attire was associated with the nobility, with priests and of course with royalty. 

The gorgeous shade of the purple, the fact that it does not fade and the difficulty in producing the dye - which is found in minute quantities in the body of mollusks and often cost more than gold - all made it the most highly valued of the dyes. 
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Until the current discovery, we had only encountered mollusk-shell waste and potsherds with patches of dye, which provided evidence of the purple industry in the Iron Age. Now, for the first time, we have direct evidence of the dyed fabrics themselves, preserved for some 3,000 years".

Ben-Yosef added: "Our archaeological expedition has been excavating continuously at Timna since 2013. As a result of the region's extremely dry climate, we are also able to recover organic materials such as textile, cords and leather from the Iron Age, from the time of David and Solomon, providing us with a unique glimpse into life in biblical times. If we excavated for another 100 years in Jerusalem, we would not discover textiles from 3,000 years ago. 

The state of preservation there is exceptional and is paralleled only by that at much later sites such as Masada and the Judean Desert Caves. In recent years, we have been excavating a new site inside Timna known as 'Slaves' Hill.' The name may be misleading, since far from being slaves, the laborers were highly skilled metalworkers. Timna was a production center for copper, the Iron Age equivalent of modern-day oil. 

Copper smelting required advanced metallurgical understanding that was a guarded secret, and those who held this knowledge were the 'hi-Tech' experts of the time. Slaves' Hill is the largest copper-smelting site in the valley and it is filled with piles of industrial waste such as slag from the smelting furnaces. 

One of these heaps yielded three scraps of colored cloth. The color immediately attracted our attention, but we found it hard to believe that we had found true purple from such an ancient period." 

Today, most scholars agree that the two precious dyes, purple [argaman] and light blue, or azure [techelet] were produced from the purple-dye mollusk under different conditions of exposure to light. When exposed to light, azure is obtained, and without light exposure, a purple hue is obtained. 

These colors are often mentioned together in the ancient sources, and both have symbolic and religious significance to this day. The Temple priests, David and Solomon, and Jesus of Nazareth are all described as having worn clothing colored with purple.

The analytical tests conducted at BIU's labs, together with dyes that were reconstructed by Amar and Sukenik, can identify the species used to dye the Timna textiles and the desired colors. In order to reconstruct the mollusk dyeing process, Amar traveled to Italy where he cracked thousands of mollusks (eaten today by Italians) and produced raw material from their dye glands that was used in hundreds of attempts to reconstruct ancient dyeing. "The practical work took us back thousands of years," said Amar, "and it has allowed us to better understand obscure historical sources associated with the precious colors of azure and purple."


The dye was identified with an advanced analytical instrument that indicated the presence of unique dye molecules, originating only in certain species of mollusk. "Most of the colored textiles found at Timna, and in archaeological research in general, were dyed using various plant-based dyes that were readily available and easier to dye with," said Sukenik. 

The use of animal-based dyes is regarded as much more prestigious, and served as an important indicator for the wearer's high economic and social status. The remnants of the purple-dyed cloth we found are not only the most ancient in Israel, but in the Southern Levant in general. 

We also believe that we have succeeded in identifying the double-dyeing method in one of the fragments, in which two species of mollusk were used in a sophisticated way to enrich the dye. This technology is described by the Roman historian Pliny the Elder, from the first century CE, and the dye it produced was considered the most prestigious."

Ben-Yosef identified the copper-production center at Timna as part of the biblical Kingdom of Edom, which bordered the Kingdom of Israel to the south. The dramatic finds should revolutionize our concepts of nomadic societies in the Iron Age, he said. "The new finds reinforce our assumption that there was an elite at Timna, attesting to a stratified society. 

In addition, since the mollusks are indigenous to the Mediterranean, this society obviously maintained trade relations with other peoples who lived on the coastal plain. However, we do not have evidence of any permanent settlements in the Edomite territory. 

The Edomite Kingdom was a kingdom of nomads in the early Iron Age. When we think of nomads, it is difficult for us to free ourselves from comparisons with contemporary Bedouins, and we therefore find it hard to imagine kings without magnificent stone palaces and walled cities." 

Yet in certain circumstances, he continued, "nomads can also create a complex socio-political structure, one that the biblical writers could identify as a kingdom. Of course, this whole debate has repercussions for our understanding of Jerusalem in the same period. 

We know that the Tribes of Israel were originally nomadic and that the process of settlement was gradual and prolonged. Archaeologists are looking for King David's palace. However, David may not have expressed his wealth in splendid buildings, but with objects more suited to a nomadic heritage such as textiles and artifacts." 

"It is wrong to assume that if no grand buildings and fortresses have been found, then biblical descriptions of the United Monarchy in Jerusalem must be literary fiction," concluded Ben-Yosef. "Our new research has showed us that even without such buildings, there were kings in our region who ruled over complex societies, formed alliances and trade relations, and waged war on each other. 

The wealth of a nomadic society was not measured in palaces and monuments made of stone but in things that were no less valued in the ancient world - such as the copper produced at Timna and the purple dye that was traded with its copper smelters."

Originally published at Israel 365 News - reposted with permission.


 



Biden Allows LGBT Flags To Be Raised Over US Embassies Worldwide...BY DAVID SIDMAN/ISRAEL 365 FEBRUARY 02, 2021 Share this article:

 

Biden Allows LGBT Flags To Be Raised Over US Embassies Worldwide

News Image BY DAVID SIDMAN/ISRAEL 365 FEBRUARY 02, 2021
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The Biden administration proudly announced a commitment to public displays of "gay pride" as newly appointed Secretary of State Anthony Blinken lifted a ban on rainbow "gay rights" flags being displayed at US embassies. 

Many mainstream media are mistakenly touting the flag ban that was instituted during the Trump administration as an anti-gay measure. In fact, the ban against rainbow flags was initiated by Defense Secretary Mark Esper as part of an initiative that also banned Confederate flags at embassies as well as military bases. 

"The flags we fly must accord with the military imperatives of good order and discipline, treating all our people with dignity and respect, and rejecting divisive symbols," Esper stated in the memo.

In 2019, the State Department rejected requests from US embassies in at least three countries to fly a rainbow banner next to the American flag in honor of Gay Pride month which falls in June. The rainbow flag was allowed to be displayed elsewhere on embassy grounds, however.

Vice President Pence defended the policy, calling it "the right decision." "When it comes to the American flagpole, and American embassies, and capitals around the world, one American flag flies," he told NBC News.
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Blinken, who was confirmed last Tuesday, also said the White House will appoint a Special Envoy for the Human Rights of LGBT Persons, a position established under the Obama administration but which remained unfilled under Trump.

As justification for his proposed measures, Blinken claimed that attacks based on sexual-orientation bias were on the rise. FBI statistics contradict this statement, showing that gender identity hate-crimes spiked in 2014 under Obama and dropped in 2017 after Trump was elected. 

The statistics show that of the approximately 7,000 single-bias incidents, less than 16% were motivated by sexual orientation bias. 

Originally published at Israel 365 News -reposted with permission.


 



Incredible Growth Of Christianity In China Has Government Leaders Worried...BY PNW STAFF FEBRUARY 02, 2021 Share this article:

 

Incredible Growth Of Christianity In China Has Government Leaders Worried

News Image BY PNW STAFF FEBRUARY 02, 2021
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As Christianity rapidly grows in China, Chinese president Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party are clamping down, fearing that the size of the Christian church may eventually force them to share power.

The size of the Church in China is set to rise impressively in the coming decades. Up 16 million from just a decade ago, if it continues to grow at its current pace (between 7 and 8 percent each year), it may reach 300 million people by 2030 - creating a collective people big enough to challenge Xi's government.

However, as the number of Christians in the country grows, so does the level of pressure from the government to conform. Since Chinese President Xi Jinping came to power, the government has increasingly sought to tighten its grip on religious groups.

The Communist Party relies strongly on Chinese cultural identity to stay in power, and works hard to make sure nothing in the country is a threat to the absolute authority of the Party. In just three years, the country has risen 26 places on the Open Doors persecution list, reflecting the intensity of the increasing oppression.

Dr Ron Boyd-MacMillan, director of Strategic Research at Open Doors said "We think the evidence as to why the Chinese Church is so targeted, is that the leaders are scared of the size of the Church, and the growth of the Church". 

"And, you know, the Chinese leadership, they really do long term planning, I mean, their economic plan goes to 2049, so this bothers them. Because I think if the Church continues to grow like that, then they'll have to share power," Dr Boyd-MacMillan added.

China's "sinicization campaign" was introduced by President Xi Jinping in 2015 and seeks to bring religion under the official atheist party's absolute control and into line with Chinese culture.  According to a five-year plan to sinicize Protestant churches released by the Chinese religious authorities, efforts to make the faith more 'Chinese' include a rewrite of the New Testament using Buddhist scripture and Confucian teachings to champion socialist ideals.

The Communist Party has also taken advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic by forcing citizens to hand over increasing amounts of personal information for monitoring that has allowed government officials to increase their surveillance operations. 

China's use of high-tech surveillance to oppress and monitor their people represents a significant development in religious persecution, as illustrated by the Uighur Muslims.

Even though they live in a remote region, China is employing its "most aggressive technology" to oppress Uighurs. "They've got technology deployed now where they've got surveillance cameras virtually everywhere in the public," US ambassador Sam Brownback notes. "They've collected genetic data on most of the people in the region to where you can be tracked on the internet and they have facial recognition systems that make it impossible to hide".

Is this the future of religious oppression for Christians? Churches currently face the difficult choice of operating underground yet in constant fear of exposure, or aligning themselves with the Communist party, and preaching only pre-approved party-favored topics.  

Those churches that do register have even been made to install CCTV cameras as China creates a massive database of all who are attending church.  Some churches and even private homes have been pressured to replaced Christian symbols with a picture of Chinese president Xi Jinping or face loss of welfare benefits.

But the oppression does not stop at church gatherings. A new policy has been implemented, imposing a ban of the online sale of Bibles. Regular inspections from the Ministry of Culture are now an expected occurrence for Christian bookstores, restricting the ability to sell Christian literature and unsanctioned Bibles.

Last year, China's government passed a national security law in an effort to strengthen adherence to the CCP-led government and suppress dissent. Following the creation of the new legislation, China has issued mass arrests of several activists and politicians.

These arrests show how the Hong Kong and Chinese authorities intentionally misled the world about the purposes of the national security law, which was instituted to suppress dissent and opposing political viewpoints.


Just last month, well known pastor and author Francis Chan revealed that after he planted three churches in Hong Kong's semiautonomous region, authorities denied him his visa, forcing him to return to the United States.

Back in the US, Chan is appealing the decision as he hopes to return. However, he expressed doubt that the Hong Kong government would allow him to return, given that the region is currently under the powerful grip of the Chinese Communist Party.

Chan said that he was struck over Hong Kong people's "climate of fear,". He emphasized that the early church during Paul's time did not have resources and Bibles but were able to establish a powerful church by the help and power of the Holy Spirit. 

Encouraging the new church leaders, he reminded them of how the Apostle Paul who would go to a city, share the gospel for a few weeks and then leave, trusting in God to continue his work. 

Chan reminds us that as tribulation tests our identity as Christians, and as the political situation increasingly restricts religious freedoms both in China and the United States we must cling to the gospel closer than ever.  As we do, we will make an impact worldwide that sometimes only comes through challenging times.


 



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