El-Kerak Inscription

El-Kerak Inscription
Material Basalt
Writing Moabite language
Created c.840 BC
Discovered 1958
Present location Jordan Archaeological Museum
Identification 6807

The El-Kerak Inscription was discovered in 1958 in Jordan, near the El-Kerak wadi. It is a basalt inscription fragment measuring 12.5 centimeters (4.9 in) high by 14 centimeters (5.5 in) wide. The inscription has been dated to the late ninth century BC.

Discovery

The stone was acquired by the Jordan Archaeological Museum in 1958. It was reportedly found by Falah Qaddur (or Fallah el-Baddour), a bedouin from the Tafilah Governorate. According to Reed and Winnett, Qaddur stated that he had found the stone "in a foundation trench that had been cut for the construction of a new building in Al Karak." A letter from Awni Dajani, then the head of antiquities at the Jordan Archaeological Museum, stated that the stone was found by Odeh Subh el-Khwalideh (a relative of Qaddur) in the house of Suleiman el-Mubayyedin, near the Roman Pool east of Kerak.

Inscription

The inscription contains 3 incomplete lines, comprising 8 complete words and fragments of 5 more, all written in the "Moabite language" known from only one other artifact - the Mesha Stele. The text of the inscription is exactly the same as that of the Mesha Stele, but there is one special feature: the letter He has four horizontal strokes going to the left from the vertical stroke, while a typical He in tenth to fifth century BC northwest Semitic inscriptions contains only three strokes to the left. This letter is present in the inscription at least 3 times, and each time it appears with 4 horizontal strokes.

Transliteration and translation

Provided below is transliteration and transcription of the inscription in Hebrew letters as well as its English translation.[1][2] Words in brackets are not preserved in the inscription, but reconstructed, partly by comparison with the Mesha Stele.

[Transcription should use the International Phonetic Alphabet and/or the original Moabite. Square Hebrew, from Imperial Square Aramaic, is a much later script.]

Line Inscription transliteration English translation
1 [אנכי משע בן כ]משית מלך מאב הד[יבני] [I am Mesha, son of K]emosh-yat, king of Moab the Dib[onite]...
2 [בבת]י כמש למבער כי אה[בתי] [... in the te]mple of Kemosh as a sacrifice, because I lo[ve...]
3 [...]נה והן עשתי את[...] ... and behold, I have made ...

Further reading

References

  1. El Kerak Inscription page
  2. Drawing by Christopher A. Rollston and transcription
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