Engraved stone found in Jerusalem addresses Jewish revolt

Bronze statue of Hadrian unearthed at Tel Shalem, which was once a camp of the Sixth Roman Legion. Displayed at the Israel Museum, the statue commemorates the Roman military victory over Bar Kochba. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Bronze statue of Hadrian unearthed at Tel Shalem, which was once a camp of the Sixth Roman Legion. Displayed at the Israel Museum, the statue commemorates the Roman military victory over Bar Kochba. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

JERUSALEM (AP) – Israeli archaeologists said Tuesday they have discovered a large stone with Latin engravings that lends credence to the theory that the reason Jews revolted against Roman rule nearly 2,000 ago was because of their harsh treatment.

Israel’s Antiquities Authority said the stone bears the name of the Roman emperor Hadrian and the year of his visit to Jerusalem, a few years before the failed Bar Kochba revolt in the second century. The inscription backs up historical accounts that Rome’s Tenth Legion was present in Jerusalem in the run-up to the revolt.

The cause of the Jewish revolt, which resulted in their exile, is disputed. It is unclear whether they rose up independently or were provoked by harsh Roman measures, but the presence of the legion would give credence to the latter.

Hadrian is reviled in Jewish history for imposing dictates aimed at persecuting Jews and forcing them to abandon their religion.

Along with Jewish accounts, the history of the Bar Kochba revolt is also known from the works of Roman historian Cassius Dio, who mentions that Hadrian visited Jerusalem in A.D. 129, three years before the revolt erupted.

The stone was found outside Jerusalem’s Old City.

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AP-WF-10-21-14 1347GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


Bronze statue of Hadrian unearthed at Tel Shalem, which was once a camp of the Sixth Roman Legion. Displayed at the Israel Museum, the statue commemorates the Roman military victory over Bar Kochba. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Bronze statue of Hadrian unearthed at Tel Shalem, which was once a camp of the Sixth Roman Legion. Displayed at the Israel Museum, the statue commemorates the Roman military victory over Bar Kochba. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.