Israeli prison to join Armageddon's list
of ancient ruins
Send a link to a friend
[August 08, 2018]
By Stephen Farrell
MEGIDDO, Israel (Reuters) - The end is nigh
at Armageddon - at least for an old Israeli prison near the ancient
ruins of Megiddo, by tradition the site of the apocalyptic Biblical
battle between good and evil.
Half an hour's drive south of Nazareth, Armageddon is a popular site for
the coach loads of tourists visiting the sites of the Holy Land. There
is also a busy program of excavations.
In 2005, work to expand the aging Megiddo Prison uncovered the remains
of a 3rd century Christian prayer hall, including a mosaic referring to
"God Jesus Christ".
The building with the mosaic was excavated, earlier artifacts found, and
the site was covered up under the supervision of archaeologists.
Now, after years of legal and bureaucratic delays, the prison is to be
relocated, freeing up the site for further exploration potentially as
early as 2021.
The prospect already has archaeologists excitedly talking about an area
they have started to call "Greater Megiddo".
"When the Christian prayer hall was first found beneath the prison, we
were all excited for one minute," said Matthew Adams, director of the
W.F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research in Jerusalem, who has
spent years excavating at Megiddo.
"And then we realized, "Oh, it's in a maximum security prison, so we'll
never actually be able to do anything with it."
"Now that the government has decided to move this prison, we can explore
this really amazing and interesting part of the development of early
Christianity in a way that we didn't think we'd be able to."
The prison, whose inmates once included Hamas and Islamic Jihad
militants, lies a few hundred yards south of Tel Megiddo itself, the
ancient mound at which archeologist have found walls dating back at
least 7,000 years.
Between the prison and the hill is the largely unexcavated Roman Sixth
Legion garrison, thought to have been built by the Emperor Hadrian.
The name Armageddon is believed to be a corruption of the Hebrew words
Har Megiddo - Mount Megiddo.
Although small, the hill was the site of numerous ancient battles
because it overlooks the Jezreel Valley, across which armies have
marched since antiquity toward a pass leading to the Mediterranean.
The earliest written reference to Megiddo seems to have been during the
reign of the Egyptian Pharaoh Thutmose III, who defeated Syrian and
Canaanite states there in 1468 BC. It later fell to the Israelites, and
then to the Assyrians in 733 BC.
In 1918, the British military commander General Edmund Allenby routed
Turkish forces there and he later took the title Viscount Allenby of
Megiddo and of Felixstowe.
But its fame derives principally from the apocalyptic final book of the
New Testament, "Revelation", which tells of "the battle of that great
day of God Almighty...And he gathered them together into a place called
in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon".
[to top of second column]
|
Workers dig at the Tel Megiddo Archaeological site in northern
Israel July 24, 2018. REUTERS/Amir Cohen
ANCIENT ROAD
The current dig at the mound is led by Adams and Prof. Israel
Finkelstein, an Israeli archaeologist at Tel Aviv University.
"Megiddo was important because it sits on the international road
which connects Egypt with Mesopotamia, with Damascus, with Anatolia.
So whoever sits here controls the most important road of antiquity
in the ancient world," Finkelstein said.
Their team has used modern radiocarbon dating and laser-assisted
distance measurements to precisely date and record the many layers
of history on the tel, including monuments once thought to have been
built in the era of King Solomon.
These, Finkelstein says, can now be attributed to the later era of
Ahab, king of the northern kingdom of Israel in the 9th century BC.
The most important things was to date things accurately.
"One way is to date according to Biblical verses, and one way is to
date according to radiocarbon studies. Biblical verses, with all due
respect, are always problematic because there are questions
regarding their author, their goals, the ideology behind the author
and so on and so forth."
But, he said, "when you work with radiocarbon you are on solid
grounds in your dating".
Israeli tourist authorities are planning a complex on the site to
combine tourism, archaeology, and nature hikes. Targeting Christian
evangelicals in particular, they hope to draw 300,000 visitors
annually, nearly double the current figure.
Much work remains.
"A prison of 1,000 dangerous prisoners will be moved and a new
complex will be built in order to expose the mosaic and enable
people from all over the world to come," prison service spokeswoman
Nicole Englander said.
Standing on Tel Megiddo as he supervised excavations into a Middle
Bronze Age site, Adams said the area appears to have been a cultural
melting pot two millennia ago, with Jews, Christians and pagan
Romans all in the same spot.
That suggested interaction between early Christians and the Roman
Empire were much more complicated than previously thought.
"Typically, we think of the Romans persecuting Christians," he said.
(Additional reporting by Rinat Harash and Haia Dakwar; Editing by
Angus MacSwan)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |