The 4 centimeter (1.5 inch)-long filigree hoop
with a ram's head mould, shown here, was discovered during
excavations outside Jerusalem's walled Old City. The dig is
around 200 meters (yards) south of the Temple Mount, which today
houses al Aqsa mosque and is known to Muslims as the Noble
Sanctuary.
The Israel Antiquities Authority said the trinket's crafting was
consistent with jewelry from the early Hellenistic period - the
3rd or early 2nd-century BCE, roughly between Jerusalem's
conquest by Alexander the Great and the Jewish revolt against
pagan rule recounted in the biblical Books of the Maccabees.
"This is the first time somebody finds a golden earring from the
Hellenistic times in Jerusalem," said Yuval Gadot, a Tel Aviv
University archaeology professor involved in the find.
Such jewelry might have been worn by wealthy men or women, at
the time, and its owner would probably have been either a Greek
living in Jerusalem or a local "Hellenised Jew", he said.
"We connect it to other things and maybe we will have a better
understanding of Jerusalem - not just the text but how people
really behaved here," Gadot told Reuters.
(Writing by Dan Williams and Rinat Harash; Editing by Matthew
Mpoke Bigg)
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